LENT
2013
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church

Greetings!
Practicing Lent

TONIGHT - Lenten Contemplative Eucharist, 7:15 p.m.
Come for some peace, quiet, and reflection as part of your Lenten observance.
383 parking permits available in the narthex when you arrive.

THURSDAY, tomorrow, 7:00 p.m. Lenten Group - St. Mark's Room 
 
SATURDAY, 9:00 a.m. Spring Churchcleaning - come and help polish altarware, clean the pews, and help prepare the church for Easter. Spring cleaning is a good Lenten discipline--whether at home or church!
 
SUNDAY, 9:30 a.m. Sunday Forum - St. Mark's Room
Topic: Toward the Future
Final part of the series: Any Body There? Worship in a Virtual Age.
Click here to read Pr. Mueller's proposals for worship renewal
 


Reflection
Easter Vigil: Queen of All Feasts

Lent is a season of preparation for Easter and the pinnacle of the liturgical year and our life together is the Easter Vigil, this year held Saturday, March 30 at 7:15 p.m. Don't miss it!  This is part of a series of reflections to help prepare our community for the feast of feasts!

by Joel Cruz, Holy Trinity member

 

Most of us have had those mountaintop experiences--those moments when you can feel the adrenalin pumping through your body, when the senses are heightened, when the clouds part and you can see more clearly than yesterday-when everything finally makes sense. For me, that describes perfectly the experience of the Easter Vigil. It's not just a "special service." It is the Queen of all Feasts, to quote an ancient writer.

 

As individuals and as a church family we have trekked through these barren Lenten lands, taking stock of life, reflecting on who we are and where we have been in relation to God and one another. Perhaps we have added an extra burden or discipline onto our daily lives. We've gathered around the Eucharistic table, our metaphorical campfire, to hear the stories of Jesus's ministry among the outcast and oppressed. Soon we will travel the most somber nights of our journey, remembering to love and serve one another even as Christ gave his own life for the world.

 

But then...on that Saturday night, our Paschal flame will dot the darkness. We will come together to recount God's awesome acts among us. Then light. The thunder of the organ. Music. The smell of fresh flowers. Color. The welling up within each of us of that word we have not dared speak these several weeks until we can resist no longer. Smiles flash back and forth to one another as if to say, "Well done! We've made it!" And the world around us seems to bathe in light; the coming spring joins us in announcing Christ's Resurrection. In this celebration we can be confident that the victory of Jesus over inhumanity and death is and can indeed be a reality in this still-dark world through the Spirit that dances within us. And it all. Finally. Makes. Sense.


If you've never made it to the Easter Vigil I hope you'll consider joining us in this celebration, one of the Church's most ancient, at 7:15 on Saturday the 30th. Having never grown up with the Vigil, the experience for me is truly a mountaintop experience. If you love our weekly Sunday services, the Vigil is the one from which they all flow. If nothing else, remember that we have tasty food and drinks at the champagne reception afterwards!

 

 

 


Lent Day By Day
40 ideas for keeping a holy Lent
from House for All Sinners and Saints' Lutheran, Denver.
Nadia Bolz Weber, pastor.  
+ Wed., March 13: Bake a cake
+ Thu., March 14: No shopping day
+ Fri., March 15: Light a virtual candle
+ Sat., March 16: Light an actual candle
+ (Sunday)
+ Mon., March 18: Write a thank you note to your favorite teacher
+ Tue.,March 19: Invest in canvas shopping bags

>>Read all 40 ideas.

Seasoning Lent
Seasoning Lent: 40 Days of Recipes and Reflections is an eight-week devotional activity designed for the Christian season of Lent. It invites you to cook simple, delicious meals as a part of your spiritual practice for this season. Each week begins with a scripture reading, reflection, and prayer, followed by recipes for each day. Even if you can't make a new recipe each day, you might choose one or two for the upcoming week.

>>Explore the devotions and recipes

Walk to the Cross 
>>Daily devotional with short reading, brief thought, and prayer.


Clothed in Christ: Daily Lenten Devotions 
Prepared by Luther Seminary, St. Paul.

Preparing for Next Sunday

These resources will help you prepare for the liturgy next Sunday. Spend some time reading and reflecting on the readings and the Lenten journey.

The Lectionary and Connections
Read this Sunday's lessons
  1. What do you think is the role of a prophet?
  2. Why do you think ancient empires carried away the artists with the political leaders?
  3. Who are "rereaders" of Isaiah's text today?
  4. What is the "something new" that you long to see God do?
  5. What is the Stillspeaking God saying to the church today, in a new day?
Further Reflections:
Jesse Jackson, 20th century
"Our dreams must be stronger than our memories. We must be pulled by our dreams, rather than pushed by our memories."

Houssaye, 19th century
"We must always have old memories and young hopes."

John Keats, 19th century
"Poetry should surprise by a fine excess and not by singularity--it should strike the reader as a wording of his own highest thoughts, and appear almost a remembrance."

Alice Walker, 21st century
"Expect nothing. Live frugally on surprise."
Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, 20th century Hungarian biochemist
"Water is life's mater and matrix, mother and medium. There is no life without water."



Signs of Love

Here near the end of Lent, the story of Mary anointing Jesus' feet points us toward the holy days to come. On Maundy Thursday we will hear about, and perhaps reenact, Jesus washing the feet of his followers. How do these two foot-washings from John's gospel relate to each other, and what do they mean for our lives as Christians?

When Jesus washed his disciples' feet, he provided an image of how his followers ought to love one another. In next Sunday's gospel, Mary models a posture of Christian service through her anointing of Jesus' feet. In performing this loving action Mary becomes an early sign of what genuine discipleship means. In other words, she "gets it" before the others.

The greatest sign of love that we will encounter again in the coming weeks is Jesus' sacrificial death on the cross for the sins of the world. In that act Christ poured himself out for all believers. Both foot-washings point to lives poured out in loving sacrifice to others. Mary's insight into what Jesus' death means, here before the passion narrative begins, helps us see what his death would come to mean for our daily living.

Through prayer, through the reading of the scriptures, and through our participation in the sacraments of baptism and communion, we too have Jesus in our midst. How do we honor his presence in our lives with our words and our actions? What signs of sacrificial love do we show others, so that they might know the welcome of a community formed by the love of Christ?

Reprinted from Words for Worship, copyright 2003 Augsburg Fortress.
Used by permission of Augsburg Fortress.

 

Holy Trinity Lutheran Church
1218 West Addison St.. + Chicago, IL + 60613

office@htchicago.org + 773.248.1233
holytrinitychicago.org
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