January 10, 2021

Stewardship Committee Update

Happy New Year! Your St. Andrew Stewardship Committee has some happy news to share. With the payment of the January 2021 mortgage payment, our mortgage balance now drops below the $900,000 milestone. Cheers to all who have helped to achieve this progress!

The year 2020 was an epic one and, with the leadership of our pastoral team, staff, and many volunteers, we plowed new ground for worship platforms in virtual settings. Even during a global pandemic, we are truly blessed at St. Andrew with members who are committed to fulfilling our “A Hope for All” campaign goal of erasing the mortgage balance.

We look forward to sharing the 2021 stewardship agenda with you
soon.

Coming Sunday:
The Gospel of Mark

This Sunday, January 10, Jim Aageson begins his four-week Adult Education class, “The Gospel of Mark: A Narrative Theology.” As Aageson notes, Mark’s gospel presents its theology in narrative form where the actions and words of Jesus reveal a powerful vision of God’s reign: “in this kingdom, things are turned upside down: the first are last, the sinners and the dishonored are invited to the table of fellowship, and those closest to Jesus are often filled with fear rather than faith.” The class begins at 10:00 am.

Bread for the Day and Daily Texts Available

The 2021 edition of Daily Texts, Bible texts selected annually by the Moravian Church and shared worldwide since 1731, are now available, as are copies of Bread for the Day, a book of Bible readings and prayers published by Augsburg Fortress. A donation of $9.00 is suggested to defray the cost of each book.

If you’d like one or more copies, please contact the church office via email or call 503-646-0629.

Raise Your Voice and Sing!

Opportunities to sing special music for upcoming worship services are now available. I will be organizing duets, solos, and other small ensembles for the offertory during the Epiphany season. Rehearsal time will be scheduled with the person(s) singing and myself and each offering will be pre recorded at a time that works for one of St. Andrew’s tech teams. If you’re interested, please contact me.

Susan Werner Reiser
srwerner.reiser@standrewlutheran.com

Table Talk: Misunderstanding Minorities

Gathered around the table in his home, Martin Luther talked freely and openly with his colleagues and students about matters of faith, theology, and varied aspects of daily life. In an effort to cultivate this kind of spirited discussion we have a tradition at St. Andrew of gathering for Table Talks. Though we cannot gather in person, Pastor Brocker invites you to participate in the next Table Talk via Zoom on Thursday, January 28, 7:00-8:00 pm.

In the early hours of Thursday, January 7, having weathered an assault on the Capitol, Congress in a joint session finally certified the election of Joe Biden as President and Kamala Harris as Vice President of the United States. They will be inaugurated on Wednesday, January 20. In this Table Talk we will ponder Fareed Zakaria’s striking post-election claim that even though Democrats won the presidential election they “misunderstand minorities.” He observes that amazingly President Trump “appears to have won the second-largest share of the minority vote than any Republican since 1976, according to exit polls. He won the largest percentage of the Black vote since 1996 (though he still got only about 12 percent of the Black vote). One poll indicates he won 35 percent of the Muslim vote.” Democrats may be wondering what happened. He asserts that the Democratic Party’s view of multiculturalism “lumps a wide variety of ethnic, racial, and religious groups into one `minority’ monolith and approaches them from a perspective that does not fit us all”. Zakaria himself was born on January 20, 1964, in Mumbai, India. In this Table Talk we will also consider how well Evangelical Lutherans understand minorities. Evangelical Lutherans are known for being the whitest denomination in the country

Spirituality Book Group News

The Spirituality Book Group will meet on Sunday, January 17, to discuss the book, She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders, by Jennifer Boylan. According to a Bookreads review, this “is the story of…a person bearing and finally revealing a complex secret; above all, it is a love story…. Boylan explores the remarkable territory that lies between men and women, examines changing friendships, and rejoices in the redeeming power of family.” Elaine May will lead the discussion when the group meets at 3:00 pm via Zoom. Book group members will receive a link a few days prior to the meeting, to which all are welcome. If you would like to attend, please contact Mary Smith and she will send you connection information.

Future Reading
February: Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
March: A Long Petal of the Sea by Isabel Allende
April: The Moment of Li, by Melinda Gates
May: This Tender Land by William Kent Krueger
June: Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson
July: The Murmur of Bees by Sofia Segrovia

Thank You

Dear Friends at St. Andrew,
I hope this note finds you all well and staying healthy!

I am reaching out to say thank you for your recent donation to Boys & Girls
Aid. Your continued support means so much to us, and it is making a difference for the children we serve, especially during this time of such uncertainty. We are grateful for your commitment to them and for your partnership with us in ensuring every child receives the love and support they deserve. Thank you!

Warmly,
Megan Bos
Asst. Director of Development

Noticing Your Neighbor

Well, so you may not really want to know your neighbors—whoever they are. But what about just considering them? That’s what I did before the holiday season when I “read” Humankind, a great book by photographer Yoshio Komatsu and his wife Eiko. You can find it in the 302 section of our library. There isn’t much to read, but there are some great quotes and lots of amazing pictures.

Take your time with it. Look closely at what all these people from all these countries are wearing. Mostly people from eastern or southern countries, some European, some US. Check out the weave, color, the patterns. See how many people just seem to be wearing cloth wrapped or draped around them, and, with that, a wristwatch! How many wear watches, sit on the floor, seem to eat so much simpler that what we call simple, and how many look happy?

Humankind is a great book for meeting your neighbor, or at least considering how he lives. Check it out.

Pam Farr
Adult Librarian

Preparing for Next Sunday

January 17, 2020

Reading: 1 Samuel 3:1-10
Gospel: John 1:43-51

Go to “Preparing for Worship” for the bulletins, the complete Lectionary, and more.

Let’s Talk, Let’s Listen Reboot

Remember when we could be together in the sanctuary on Sunday mornings? Think about who you used to see in the pews around you or in the narthex or in an Adult Ed class or grabbing a coffee. Now think about who you have seen on Zoom, or heard about from someone else. Who is missing? Who haven’t you heard from or about during these unusual times?

In next week’s Weekly News, you will find instructions for how to be a part of the “reboot” of last summer’s “Let’s Talk, Let’s Listen” campaign. This time around, the St. Andrew Caring Ministries Coordinating Team and the MACG Core Team is interested in making sure that no one in our community has slipped away from our notice. We also want to know if there are needs that are not being met that could be addressed through our faith community. Between now and next week, take notice of who you are seeing in Zoom meetings or worship, and who you miss seeing. Then please join us in an effort to connect with those we are wondering about, either by a phone call or written note. If you have any questions, please contact any member of the Core Team: Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, Scott Taylor, Bob Stadel, Victoria Kovalenko, Lynn Santelmann, or Pastor Robyn. Thank you for helping to build our community by reaching out to those who may be wondering where the rest of us have been through these uncertain times.

Doing Good on the Legislative Level

Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon (EMO) and three of its faithbased advocacy partners are hosting their Annual Legislative Forum this coming Saturday, January 9, from 1:00-3:00 pm.

As Rev. Michael Ellick, director of public engagement at EMO, says “There is a lot of good work for us to do together in the coming year here in Oregon, especially on the legislative level.”

During the forum, a panel of legislators will discuss their priorities for the 2021 Oregon Legislative Session on topics of interest to the faith community. These will include housing/human services, healthcare, economic recovery, climate/environment, and police reform/judiciary. Legislators will highlight the bills they support and the prospects of their passing. Following the panel discussion, the Zoom meeting will allow for a half-hour discussion with our elected representatives. Register now.

Opportunities for Meeting with Pastor Robyn

Pastor Robyn will be offering weekly opportunities for anyone wanting to meet with her outdoors under the front door overhang at St. Andrew from now until her final Sunday with St. Andrew on February 7. Feel free to stop by anytime during these outside hours” for some conversation or to share a prayer of communion (using a personalized communion wafer and cup she’ll have available). Opportunities to stop by this week include Sunday, January 10, 1:30-2:30 pm and Wednesday, January 13, 1:30-2:30 pm.

You can also contact her (email or 503-646-0629, ext. 211) to set up a different time to meet her outside at the church or outside your own home.

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Eunice Harrum (mother) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Francine Cach
Family and friends of Ann Hooson (mother-in-law) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Jennifer Hooson
Family and friends of Colleen Warnes Peace and God’s comfort at her death Staff
Don Scholz (father-in-law) Comfort Judy Scholz
Bob and Jack Scholz (husband and son) Safe travels Judy Scholz
Katherine (friend) Successful carotid artery surgery (January 12) Mary Smith
Barb Carol Successful surgery an effective treatment Linda Fransen
Linda Larson (cousin) Effective treatment and healing Doris Larson
Vaughn “Vonnie” Wilson (Larry’s sister) Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Larry & Phyllis Vachal
Tom (friend’s father) Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Rebecca Fako Uecker
Everyone affected by COVID-19 Strength and support Staff
Health care workers Strength, courage, protection, and support Staff
St. Andrew Council
Executive Committee
Staff
Wisdom and discernment Staff
Karen Klingelhafer,
Kyler Vogt,
and all seminarians;
India Jensen Kerr
and all theology students
Encouragement and support Staff
St. Andrew Foundation Blessings on their ministry Staff
Individual friends and loved ones in need of prayer Whatever they most need; say their names in your heart or aloud Everyone
St. Peter Lutheran Church (Tillamook, OR)
Hoodland Lutheran Church (Brightwood, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Havurah Shalom (Portland, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

Creation Justice Summit

The 8th annual Creation Justice Summit (formerly the Earth Care Summit) will commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Columbia River Watershed Pastoral Letter. The virtual event will include a keynote panel, breakout workshops, and a closing address from U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley.

Register now.
$20 general, $10 students, scholarships available
Presented by EMO’s Creation Justice and Oregon Interfaith Power & Light.

Giving Statements for 2020

St. Andrew’s financial secretaries will continue to update 2020 giving records through January 19. Your 2020 giving statements should be available after January 20, 2020. At that time you’ll be able to download and print your statement from your InFellowship account on the Give page of the church website.

Please note that statements will be mailed out only upon special request after January 20. If you need a statement mailed to you, please contact the Financial Secretaries or the church office (503-646-0629).

The St. Andrew Finance Team

A Must Read

One of the books Mary Nell Mahler had purchased for the St. Andrew Library at the recent virtual book sale was Keys to Bonhoeffer’s Haus: Exploring the World and Wisdom of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, by Laura Fabrycky. Mary Nell made certain that I received the book with a compelling recommendation that I read it. Of course, I couldn’t refuse! Having just completed my read, I understand Mary Nell’s enthusiastic endorsement of the work and I concur completely.

Over the last several years, we have had the great fortune of having Pastor Mark Brocker repeatedly introduce us to Bonhoeffer and utilize Bonhoeffer’s work in sermons and teachings. I found Fabrycky’s Keys to Bonhoeffer’s Haus to not only complement Pastor Mark’s work, but to provide me an understanding of formative influences on Bonhoeffer and challenges he confronted that I had not considered.

If anyone is interested in being the next reader of this remarkable book, please contact me and I will get the book to you. Otherwise, I will get the book to Pam Farr, the St. Andrew Librarian.

Bob Cornie
503-645-2529

Highlights for the Week

Go to the complete online church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, January 10, Baptism of Our Lord

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School Online: Baptism Lesson with Pastor Mark Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education: The Gospel of Mark Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Monday, January 11

7:00 pm Men’s Book Club Zoom

Tuesday, January 12

9:00 am Facility Management Team Meeting Zoom
10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
1:30 pm Service Committee Meeting Zoom
6:00 pm HR Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Finance Committee Meeting Zoom

Wednesday, January 13 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

10:00 am Reopening Committee Meeting Zoom
1:00 pm Yard Science Team Planning Meeting with Camp Lutherwood Zoom
6:00 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm Wednesday Evening Prayer Zoom
7:00 pm High School Youth Hangout Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer & Other Breakout Room Opportunities Zoom

Thursday, January 14

12:00 pm Team Ministry Meeting Zoom

Friday, January 15

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
11:00 am Funeral for Eunice Harrum YouTube

Sunday, January 17: Second Sunday of Epiphany

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School Online: Baptism Lesson with Pastor Mark Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education: The Gospel of Mark Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




December 20, 2020



Worship Connection Problems?

St. Andrew’s tech team is offering a new service on Sundays for anyone having difficulty connecting to worship. Between 8:00 am and 1:00 pm, you can simply call the church office at 503-646-0629 to get help from the pros.

Remember that Rebecca Fako Uecker also continues to offer technical help for church-related purposes. You can contact her via email.

Adult Education: The Miseries of Job

Steve Christiansen concludes his exploration of the Book of Job at 10:00 am on Sunday, December 20, with Session 8. You’ll find a course outline on St. Andrew’s website and can access the class using the same Zoom link needed for Sunday worship.

Holden Evening Prayer on Wednesdays

This coming Wednesday, Julie Aageson will offer a meditation from her new book, Finding Home, as part of Holden Evening Prayer. Please join us on Wednesday, December 23:

  • 6:30 pm: Informal Gathering Time
  • 7:00 pm Holden Evening Prayer
  • 7:30 pm: Centering Prayer & Other Opportunities

Advent offers the perfect opportunity to engage in Centering Prayer as we sit in silence to await the celebration of Christ’s coming.

The Zoom connection link is sent out Wednesday afternoons, so watch your inbox for it.

Coming in January –
The Gospel of Mark

St. Andrew’s Adult Education offering in January will focus on “The Gospel of Mark: A Narrative Theology,” taught by Jim Aageson. Mark’s gospel presents its theology in narrative form where the actions and words of Jesus reveal a powerful vision of God’s reign. As Aageson notes, “in this kingdom, things are turned upside down: the first are last, the sinners and the dishonored are invited to the table of fellowship, and those closest to Jesus are often filled with fear rather than faith.” The class will begin at 10:00 am on Sunday, January 10.

A-Caroling We Go

Sing along or just listen. The Werner sisters invite you to enjoy a short recording of favorite carols (all in the public domain) on our website.

Scroll to the bottom of St. Andrew’s worship page to find the video.

Christmas Week Worship

Sunday, December 20, 4:30 pm
Blue Christmas Service
Zoom – link in email

While Advent is a season of hope and Christmas is a season of joy, not everyone feels hopeful or ready to celebrate. Grief, illness, aging, depression, loneliness, unemployment and loss are magnified, especially during a pandemic. As we enter into the longest night of the year 2020, join us at sunset for a Blue Christmas worship service in the St. Andrew worship/community Zoom room. Then, if you’d like to share in some conversation with our caring ministers and Pastor Robyn, just bring your own tea or hot apple cider and stick around to talk.


Sunday, December 20, 7:00 pm
Advent/Christmas Vespers
Livestream – link in email


Christmas Eve, Thursday, December 24, 4:00 pm
Birthday Party for Jesus!
Zoom – link in email

For a family-focused celebration, please join us at 4:00 pm on Thursday, December 24, via Zoom for a special Birthday Party for Jesus. We’ll be featuring carols, games, and a visit from our favorite furry friends! Families are encouraged to dress for the occasion, whether in ugly Christmas sweaters or with party hats and balloons! Plus, we’ll be giving a special birthday gift to Jesus by doing something nice for others. If you’d like to contribute to this gift, you can do so online via the church website or by mailing a check to the church; just make sure to mark it for the Birthday Party for Jesus. Keep an eye out for the Zoom link for this event in the “Worship Links” e-mail the week of Christmas Eve.

Keep an eye out for the Zoom link for this event in the “Worship Links” e-mail the week of Christmas Eve. We hope to see you there!


Christmas Eve, Thursday, December 24,
6:45 pm Musical Prelude begins
7:00 pm Christmas Eve Candlelight Service
Livestream will be on the homepage; no link required


Christmas Day, Friday, December 25, 1:00-4:00 pm
Stay Home, but Not Alone!
Zoom – link in email

1:00 pm: Christmas Social Time—share your favorite Christmas stories.
2:00 pm: Games—join Scott Taylor, Pastor Robyn, and Janet Parker for hilarious fun.
3:00 pm: Show & Tell—share your favorite gift or play us a Christmas song.
Anytime: Notify Rebecca Fako Uecker to be assigned a Zoom breakout room whereyou can meet with family or friends to support one another in Staying Home to Save Lives.


Foundation Core Values, Part 2

Your St. Andrew Foundation adopted six core values at our recent strategic planning retreat. These are fundamental principles that guide the Foundation’s activities and decision-making. This week, we highlight three of these core values:

COMPASSIONATE/CARING: We are compassionate and caring in all that we do, aligning with the core values: God care, Earth care, community care, neighbor care, and self care.

ACCOUNTABILITY: We are transparent, we acknowledge gifts and we communicate our efforts with the congregation. We will regularly monitor that we are being inclusive and acting within our Christian values.

PARTNERSHIPS: We are partnering with the congregation and other organizations in the community to provide for the well-being of individuals and the community as a whole.

Did you know that last year the Foundation awarded $5,550 in grants (to four organizations) and $2,300 in scholarships (to four individuals)? We are actively seeking new members for our Board of Directors as we carry out our core values and vision.

Are you interested in learning more? Contact Sonja Ackman.

Meet the EcoFaith Match

EcoFaith Recovery has been offered a $2,000 year-end matching grant that will match every first-time donation, the amount of increase of any annual donation, and/or the one-year value of any monthly sustaining donation that you set up before December 31. Your generous gifts help EcoFaith Recovery fund this year’s “Just Vote Harnessing Our Values for Climate and Racial Justice Initiative” and our “Community Carbon” pilot community initiative. Thank you so much for helping EcoFaith meet the match with your generous donations to
www.EcoFaithRecovery.org/Give
or EcoFaith Recovery, P.O. Box 12612, Portland, OR 97212.

With gratitude,
Pastor Robyn Hartwig

Preparing for Next Sunday

December 27, 2020

Reading: Isaiah 61:10-62:3
Gospel: Luke 2:22-40

Go to “Preparing for Worship” for the bulletins, the complete Lectionary, and more.

Sound Investments

As equipment has reached the end of its useful life, the sound system in St. Andrew’s Sanctuary has gone through various upgrades in recent years in an attempt to make the spoken word more understandable throughout the room.

  • 2010: We switched from lapel microphones to earloops to reduce feedback problems.
  • 2013: We replaced the amplifier and crossover to further reduce potential feedback and to equalize amplified voice sound in the room.
  • 2016: We replaced the speakers to distribute sound better into pews beyond the center of the room. This also finally opened up the top of the tapestry to full view. (project cost—$7,800)
  • 2017-2019: We replaced all wireless microphones due to changes made to the wireless spectrum by the FCC. (cost—$2,000+)

And, in just the past few weeks, Chris Weiss spent about 15 hours installing new wiring and setting up a new (currently borrowed) soundboard, aka mixer, in the Sound Room. As Weiss points out, our needs and expectations for the audio mixer shifted once the pandemic forced St. Andrew to stream its services. At this time, when we are all worshiping remotely, we need to mic things that don’t need amplification when we worship in-person, namely the organ, piano, bells, and vocalist. And, when we move back to in-person worship, we’ll also need to mic the congregation and the choir to provide a full experience for those who continue to worship from their homes.

As Weiss explains, “On any given Sunday before the pandemic, we were only mixing 4-5 microphones, whereas I am now using 16 channels on the new mixer.” He anticipates using 20-24 channels when in-person worship resumes.

Managing Your Mental Health During this Holiday Season

Many of us have found it particularly challenging to manage our own mental health as the pandemic continues, holiday plans are changed, and life as we knew it seems farther and farther away. The Caring Ministries Team recommends a series of articles found on the website for Mental Health USA. This week, take a look at their “Latest News & Updates” and read one or more of the four short articles on their page. Devote some time this week to work on one of St. Andrew’s Core Values: Self Care.

St. Andrew Caring Ministries Team

Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker (on call Fridays & Saturdays)
office: 503-646-0629 (extension 201)
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig (on call Sundays & Mondays)
Office: 503-646-0629 (extension 211)
PastorRobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Ali Alajrab Peace and God’s comfort at his death from COVID-19 Staff
Family and friends of Bobbie Jo Lynn (friend) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Bev Briggs
Mary Lynn Support and assistance in securing care Bev Briggs
Colleen Warnes Peace and comfort in hospice care Suzanne Warnes
Alvina Heidinger (mother-in-law) Peace and comfort in hospice care Judy Heidinger
Carol Hogan Accurate diagnosis and effective treatment Carol Hogan
Pam Successful radiation treatment Patty Jones
Tammy Piscitelli Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Ed & Linda Fransen
Elaine May Healing and recovery from knee replacement surgery Elaine May
Gary Grafwallner Healing and recovery from skin cancer surgery Gary Grafwallner
Dr. Cara Steinkeler Strength and protection Gary & Gail Grafwallner
Melanie Waller, Aniyah and Tanner Alcorn Support and well-being Melanie Waller
Dr. Don Scholz (Bob’s father) Thanksgiving for coronavirus vaccination (12/30) Bob & Judy Scholz
Hank Scholz (son) Thanksgiving for coronavirus vaccination (12/17) Bob & Judy Scholz
Everyone Availability of effective vaccine and few side effects Judy Scholz
Everyone affected by COVID-19 Strength and support Staff
Health care workers Strength, courage, protection, and support Staff
Those confined to their homes:
Mareline Barnes,
Dave Bumgardner,
Jean Fredrickson,
Tara Harper,
Douglas Hooke,
Betty Horst,
Dorothy Moore,
Phyllis Morris,
Ed Pacey,
Helen Rogers,
Dave & Sharon Roth,
Margie Schindele
Assurance of God’s presence Staff
All who are imprisoned Peace and strength Staff
Individual friends and loved ones in need of prayer Whatever they most need; say their names in your heart or aloud Everyone
Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon,
Holy Trinity Catholic Church
Blessings on their work Staff
Zion Lutheran Church (Port Orford, OR)
Zion Lutheran Church (The Dalles, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Masjid An-Noor (Portland, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

Refugee Family Suffers a COVID Death

Ali Alajrab, patriarch of the Syrian family St. Andrew assisted when they first came to the US from a refugee camp in Jordan in 2016, died on November 21, 2020, due to COVID-19. He was the sole support of his wife Fouza and two younger children, Omar and Ahed. The already-struggling family, which left Portland for Southern California in 2017 and later moved to Ohio, now faces even more challenges. For more information or to help them meet their needs, go to their GoFundMe site.

Creation Justice Summit

The 8th annual Creation Justice Summit (formerly the Earth Care Summit) will commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Columbia River Watershed Pastoral Letter. The virtual event will include a keynote panel, breakout workshops, and a closing address from U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley.

Register now
$20 general, $10 students, scholarships available
Presented by EMO’s Creation Justice and Oregon Interfaith Power & Light.

Highlights for the Week

Go to the complete online church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, December 20, Fourth Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education: Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
4:30 pm Blue Christmas Service Zoom
7:00 pm Advent/Christmas Vespers YouTube

Tuesday, December 22 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd

Wednesday, December 23

6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm Holden Evening Prayer Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer & other breakout room opportunities Zoom

Thursday, December 24 – Christmas Eve; Church Office Closed

4:00 pm Birthday Party for Jesus Zoom
7:00 pm Christmas Eve Candlelight Service Livestream on Website

Friday, December 25 – Christmas Day; Church Office Closed

1:00 pm Stay Home, but Not Alone! Gathering Zoom

Sunday, December 27, First Sunday of Christmas

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am NO Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am NO Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am NO High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am NO Adult Education Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




December 13, 2020

December Movie Night

Have you watched the classic film, A Christmas Carol, yet this season? If not, do so yet today and then join other St. Andrew people for our first Movie Night tonight, Friday, December 11, at 7:00 pm. We’ll talk about the classic, which you can find in no less than 20 versions. Some are old black and white classics from as far back as 1938, some are animated, some are modern interpretations, as
recent as 2020. You can stream many different versions on Amazon, some for free, some for a small rental fee. Or you may have your own favorite DVD of this classic at home. It will be fun to compare highlights with each other, as well as reflect on this beautiful story of redemption. This will also be a time to make suggestions for films for future movie nights.

You’ll find the Zoom link for our first Movie Night in today’s “Weekly News” e-mail.

Mary Smith

Holden Evening Prayer on Wednesdays

During Advent, St. Andrew’s Wednesday evening services will center around the beloved Holden Evening Prayer, with Julie Aageson offering meditations from her new book, Finding Home. Please join us for any or all of these events on Wednesday, December 16, and December 23:

  • 6:30 pm: Informal Gathering Time
  • 7:00 pm Holden Evening Prayer
  • 7:30 pm: Centering Prayer

Advent offers the perfect opportunity to engage in Centering Prayer as we sit in silence to await the celebration of Christ’s coming.

The Zoom connection link is sent out Wednesday afternoons, so watch your inbox for it.

Adult Education: The Miseries of Job

Steve Christiansen will continue his exploration of the Book of Job at 10:00 am on Sunday, December 13, with Session 7. You’ll find a course outline on St. Andrew’s website and can access the class using the same Zoom link needed for Sunday worship.

An incorrect translation has led us to believe that Job was a patient man. Not so, Christiansen explains, but he was persistent and he kept going in spite of the odds. Job’s story is relevant for our time in that it raises many questions about the suffering of the innocent.

Christmas Giving Tree

St. Andrew will be doing a Giving Tree for needy families with children enrolled at Barnes Elementary again this year. Like all of us, these parents yearn to make the holidays sparkle for their children, and we can help.

Just as we did with Thanksgiving Boxes, we’ll be providing gift cards in 2020, giving parents the opportunity to shop for what their families need most. You can donate to the cause by sending a check made out to St. Andrew with Giving Tree in the memo line. If you prefer to give electronically, select “Give” on the menu bar of St. Andrew’s website, then “Click here to give now.” Once you’ve signed in to your account, select the green “Give” button and then choose the fund “Christmas Giving Tree.”

Questions? Please call Donna Brocker at 503-502-6156. And read about the challenges one family is facing below:

One Family’s Story

Diana and her daughters just moved into their new apartment. It is a great relief for them after months of living in a shelter for abused women. Diana’s challenges in raising her daughters—ages 17 and 8—are complicated by her diabetes. Just about a month ago, she had to have one of her legs amputated as a result of her illness. Fortunately, her older daughter can drive and has been a big help as she adjusts. Diana continues to be troubled by pain and the challenges of shopping. As for so many families in need this year, Diana’s Christmas wish is that she’ll have enough food for herself and her girls. As she re-starts her life, food is her family’s most basic need. Full stomachs are a great comfort in uncertain times.

Thank You!

Donna Brocker, who organizes the Giving Tree, meets with the families, and scrambles to meet their needs, joins all the Barnes families she’s reached out to this year in thanking you for your heartfelt help in continuing and expanding this ministry. By sharing your resources, you’re demonstrating God’s love in this world. Thank you, all!

Worship Connection Problems?

St. Andrew’s tech team is offering a new service on Sundays for anyone having difficulty connecting to worship. Between 8:00 am and 1:00 pm, you can simply call the church office at 503-646-0629 to get help from the pros.

Remember that Rebecca Fako Uecker also continues to offer technical help for church-related purposes. You can contact her via email.

Foundation Core Values, Part 2

Your St. Andrew Foundation adopted six core values at our recent strategic planning retreat. These are fundamental principles that guide the Foundation’s activities and decision-making. This week, we highlight three of these core values:

COMPASSIONATE/CARING: We are compassionate and caring in all that we do, aligning with the core values: God care, Earth care, community care, neighbor care, and self care.

ACCOUNTABILITY: We are transparent, we acknowledge gifts and we communicate our efforts with the congregation. We will regularly monitor that we are being inclusive and acting within our Christian values.

PARTNERSHIPS: We are partnering with the congregation and other organizations in the community to provide for the well-being of individuals and the community as a whole.

Did you know that last year the Foundation awarded $5,550 in grants (to four organizations) and $2,300 in scholarships (to four individuals)? We are actively seeking new members for our Board of Directors as we carry out our core values and vision.

Are you interested in learning more? Contact Sonja Ackman.

Advent Devotional

Allison Katsufrakis, Libby Calhoun, and Deacon Susan Reiser have created a family friendly devotional for every day in Advent. There is an Advent wreath to color as the weeks progress. For each day of the season, there is a picture to color, a scripture passage, and a suggestion for an action to take in your home. The scripture passages come from a variety of sources, so even if you think you know the story you might discover new insights. Take some time during this busy season to pause and reflect on the gift of the Word made flesh. Visit the St. Andrew website Worship page to find the Advent Devotional.

Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker (on call Fridays & Saturdays)
office: 503-646-0629 (extension 201)
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig (on call Sundays & Mondays)
Office: 503-646-0629 (extension 211)
PastorRobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

Caroling in 2020

December is the opportunity to sing Christmas Carols to those in our congregation unable to join us for worship and other activities. But, this year, of course, the pandemic means we’re unable to visit people in person.

In order to fill that gap, the three sisters—Carol Werner, Susan Werner Reiser, and Kristie Werner Gladhill—have created a short recording of our favorite carols. We hope they are your favorites, too.

After this weekend, you can find the recording on the St. Andrew website Worship page. Simply click on “Worship” on the menu/navigation bar at the top of this website.

Please sing along!

Christmas Week Worship

Sunday, December 20, 4:30 pm
Blue Christmas Service
Zoom – link in email

While Advent is a season of hope and Christmas is a season of joy, not everyone feels hopeful or ready to celebrate. Grief, illness, aging, depression, loneliness, unemployment and loss are magnified, especially during a pandemic. As we enter into the longest night of the year 2020, join us at sunset for a Blue Christmas worship service in the St. Andrew worship/community Zoom room. Then, if you’d like to share in some conversation with our caring ministers and Pastor Robyn, just bring your own tea or hot apple cider and stick around to talk.

Sunday, December 20, 7:00 pm
Advent/Christmas Vespers
Livestream – link in email

A service of Word and Song as we prepare for the birth of the Christ Child.

Thursday, December 24, 4:00 pm
Christmas Eve
Birthday Party for Jesus!
Zoom – link in email

For a family-focused celebration, please join us at 4:00 pm on Thursday, December 24, via Zoom for a special Birthday Party for Jesus. We’ll be featuring carols, games, and a visit from our favorite furry friends! Families are encouraged to dress for the occasion, whether in ugly Christmas sweaters or with party hats and balloons! Plus, we’ll be giving a special birthday gift to Jesus by doing something nice for others. If you’d like to contribute to this gift, you can do so online via the church website or by mailing a check to the church; just make sure to mark it for the Birthday Party for Jesus. Keep an eye out for the Zoom link for this event in the “Worship Links” e-mail the week of Christmas Eve.

Keep an eye out for the Zoom link for this event in the “Worship Links” e-mail the week of Christmas Eve. We hope to see you there!

Thursday, December 24
Christmas Eve

6:45 pm, Musical Prelude
7:00 pm, Candlelight Service
Livestream will be on the homepage; no link required

Friday, December 25, 1:00-4:00 pm
Stay Home, but Not Alone!
Zoom – link in email

1:00 pm: Christmas Social Time—share your favorite Christmas stories.
2:00 pm: Games—join Scott Taylor, Pastor Robyn, and Janet Parker for hilarious fun.
3:00 pm: Show & Tell—share your favorite gi7 or play us a Christmas song.
Anytime: Notify Rebecca Fako Uecker to be assigned a Zoom breakout room whereyou can meet with family or friends to support one another in Staying Home to Save Lives.

Managing Your Mental Health During an Unusual Holiday Season

Many of us have found it particularly challenging to manage our own mental health as the pandemic continues, holiday plans are changed, and life as we knew it seems farther and farther away. The Caring Ministries Team recommends a series of articles found on the website for Mental Health USA. This week, take a look at their suggestions for maintaining your own mental health during this unusual holiday season

Take some time this week to work on one of St. Andrew’s Core Values: Self Care.

St. Andrew Caring Ministries Team

Writing to Reclaim Our Vote

Thank you to Carol Horton, who coordinated St. Andrew volunteers in another round of postcard writing with “Relcaim Our Vote,” a 501(c)(3) nonprofit working to help disenfranchised voters know how they can exercise their right to vote. Thank you also to all of those who worked with Carol to put faith into action, including Sharon Fako, Joel & Beth Johnson, Donna McAlpine, Fran Miller, Jan Smith, Sue Cahlander, Larry & Bonnie Bliesner, Liz Hardy, Bob & Cindy Stadel, and Karen Zocchi. Their collective efforts generated 500 postcards that were sent to Georgia this week! Let me know if you would like to be added to the list of people willing to write postcards in the future.

Pastor Robyn

Spirituality Book Group News

Fran Miller will lead the discussion when the Spirituality Book Group meets on Sunday, December 13, at 3:00 pm to discuss The Nickel Boys, by Colson Whitehead. The book won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2020.

“Based on the real story of a reform school in Florida that operated for 111 years and warped the lives of thousands of children, The Nickel Boys is a devastating, driven narrative that showcases a great American novelist writing at the height of his powers,” says one review on Amazon.

A Zoom link will be sent out to all who are on the Spirituality Book Group e-mail list a few days before the meeting. If you are not on the list, but would like to attend, please contact Mary Smith.

Future Reading

January (Date TBA)
Book: She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders, by Jennifer Boylan
Discussion Leader: TBA

February (Date TBA)
Book: Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Discussion Leader: TBA

Meet the Match for EcoFaith Recovery

EcoFaith Recovery has been offered a $2,000 year-end matching grant that will match every first-time donation, the amount of increase of any annual donation, and/or the one-year value of any monthly sustaining donation that you set up before December 31. Your generous gifts help EcoFaith Recovery fund this year’s “Just Vote Harnessing Our Values for Climate and Racial Justice Initiative” and our “Community Carbon” pilot community initiative. Thank you so much for helping EcoFaith meet the match with your generous donations to
www.EcoFaithRecovery.org/Give
or EcoFaith Recovery, P.O. Box 12612, Portland, OR 97212.

With gratitude,
Pastor Robyn Hartwig

Scouting for Food

Due to to good organization, planning, and commitment, members of St. Andrew’s Scout Troop 618 and 5618 collected 1,723 pounds of food for the Food Bank at St. Matthew Lutheran Church on December 5. Almost 50 Scouts and leaders participated, accompanied by several siblings and even a couple of dogs. Thank you!

Sound Investments

As equipment has reached the end of its useful life, the sound system in St. Andrew’s Sanctuary has gone through various upgrades in recent years in an attempt to make the spoken word more understandable throughout the room.

  • 2010: We switched from lapel microphones to earloops to reduce feedback problems.
  • 2013: We replaced the amplifier and crossover to further reduce potential feedback and to equalize amplified voice sound in the room.
  • 2016: We replaced the speakers to distribute sound better into pews beyond the center of the room. This also finally opened up the top of the tapestry to full view. (project cost—$7,800)
  • 2017-2019: We replaced all wireless microphones due to changes made to the wireless spectrum by the FCC. (cost—$2,000+)

And, in just the past few weeks, Chris Weiss spent about 15 hours installing new wiring and setting up a new (currently borrowed) soundboard, aka mixer, in the Sound Room. As Weiss explains, “Probably the biggest factor that has stopped us from replacing the mixer until recently was that it would require someone to sit at the board for the entirety of both services every Sunday morning.” And that’s a big commitment!

But our needs and expectations for the audio mixer shifted once the pandemic forced St. Andrew to stream its services. Now, we need to mic things that don’t need amplification when we worship in-person, namely the organ, piano, bells, and vocalist. And, when we move back to in-person worship, we’ll also need to mic the congregation and the choir to provide as full an experience as possible for those who continue to worship from their homes.

As Weiss explains, “On any given Sunday before the pandemic, we were only mixing 4-5 microphones, whereas I am now using 16 channels on the new mixer.” He anticipates using 20-24 channels when in-person worship resumes.

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Larry Mostaert (cousin) Peace and God’s comfort at his death Pastor Robyn Hartwig
Alvina Heidinger (mother-in-law) Peace and comfort in hospice care Judy Heidinger
Carol Hogan Accurate diagnosis and effective treatment Carol Hogan
Dr. Cara Steinkeler Strength and protection Gary & Gail Grafwallner
Gary Grafwallner Successful surgery (Dec. 16) for facial skin cancer Gary Grafwallner
All those struggling with mental health challenges Healing and calm Staff
Everyone affected by COVID-19 Strength and support Staff
Health care workers Strength, courage, protection, and support Staff
US election officials, volunteers, and support staff to ensure free and fair elections Safety and protection Staff
St. Andrew Council
Executive Committee
Staff
Wisdom and discernment Staff
Karen Klingelhafer, Kyler Vogt, and all seminarians
India Jensen Kerr and all theology students
Encouragement and support Staff
St. Andrew Foundation Blessings on their ministry Staff
Atonement Lutheran Church (Newport, OR)
Faith Lutheran Church (North Bend, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Congregation Kesser Israel (Portland, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

Let’s Talk, Let’s Listen Reboot

Last summer, the St. Andrew MACG Core Team organized a listening campaign, encouraging members to make phone calls to people we missed seeing at church. Now that this unusual holiday season has arrived, and the colder weather prevents outdoor gatherings, it’s time to check in once again. Look for details in early January about how to be a part of this reboot.

In the meantime, please let the Core Team know how we can improve the program. Contact any of us—Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, Scott Taylor, Bob Stadel, Victoria Kovalenko, Lynn Santelmann, or Pastor Robyn—if you
have any feedback.

A Thanksgiving Thank You

Thanks to the generous donations of St. Andrew members, we were able to raise $3,921 to purchase grocery gift certificates for needy families identified by Washington County Community Action. Your gifts are truly appreciated! Thank you.

The Service Committee

Greeting Cards Redux

Many thanks for both the used and the unused greeting cards put into the collection box in Fellowship Hall. I have turned many used cards into gift tags and gift bags. The unused cards are matched with envelopes and sent
on to bless both senders and receivers. Thank you for recycling!

Pam Meredith

Editor’s Note:
If you’d like to contribute to Pam’s Card Ministry while the pandemic continues to keep the church doors locked, simply drop them off at the Narthex entrance. You’ll find a bin behind the food collection barrel. We’ll make sure Pam continues to be well-stocked with cards.

Preparing for Next Sunday

December 20, 2020

Reading: Luke 1:46b-55
Gospel: Luke 1:26-38

Go to “Preparing for Worship” for the bulletins, the complete Lectionary, and more.

Highlights for the Week

Go to the complete online church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, December 13, Third Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education: Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Monday, December 14

7:00 pm Men’s Book Club Zoom

Tuesday, December 15

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
10:00 am Worship Planning Zoom
12:15 pm Community Carbon Leadership Meeting Zoom

Wednesday, December 16 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

5:45 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm Holden Evening Prayer Zoom
7:00 pm High School Youth Hangout Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer & other breakout room opportunities Zoom

Thursday, December 17

12:00 pm Team Ministry Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Council Meeting Zoom

Friday, December 18

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd

Sunday, December 20, Fourth Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  The Book of Job Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
4:30 pm Blue Christmas Service Zoom
7:00 pm Advent/Christmas Vespers Livestream

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




December 6, 2020

December Movie Night

Do you like going to the movies? And talking about them afterward? We are planning monthly St. Andrew movie nights, COVID-style. We will select some movies to stream at home and then each month, we’ll invite you to bring out the popcorn and gather around your computer screens as we talk about what we liked (and didn’t like) about that month’s movie.

Our first Movie Night will be Friday, December 11, at 7:00 pm. Since it’s December, lets watch a classic—A Christmas Carol. I counted no less than 20 versions of this movie that can be streamed. Some are old black and white classics from as far back as 1938, some are animated, some are modern interpretations, as recent as 2020. You can stream many different versions on Amazon, some for free, some for a small rental fee. Or you may have your own favorite DVD of this classic at home. It will be fun to compare highlights with each other, as well as reflect on this beautiful story of redemption. This will also be a time to make suggestions for films for future movie nights.

You’ll find the Zoom link for our first Movie Night in Carol’s “Weekly News” e-mail on Friday, December 11.

Mary Smith

Worship Connection Problems?

St. Andrew’s tech team is offering a new service on Sundays for anyone having difficulty connecting to worship. Between 8:00 am and 1:00 pm, you can simply call the church office at 503-646-0629 to get help from the pros.

Remember that Rebecca Fako Uecker also continues to offer technical help for church-related purposes. You can contact her via email.

Holden Evening Prayer on Wednesdays

During Advent, St. Andrew’s Wednesday evening services will center around the beloved Holden Evening Prayer, with Julie Aageson offering meditations from her new book, Finding Home. Please join us for any or all of these events on Wednesday, December 9, December 16, and December 23:

  • 6:30 pm: Informal Gathering Time
  • 7:00 pm Holden Evening Prayer
  • 7:30 pm: Centering Prayer

Advent offers the perfect opportunity to engage in Centering Prayer as we sit in silence to await the celebration of Christ’s coming.

The Zoom connection link is sent out Wednesday afternoons, so watch your inbox for it.

Adult Education: The Miseries of Job

Steve Christiansen will continue his exploration of the Book of Job at 10:00 am on Sunday, December 6, with Session 6. You’ll find a course outline on St. Andrew’s website and can access the class using the same Zoom link needed for Sunday worship.

An incorrect translation has led us to believe that Job was a patient man. Not so, Christiansen explains, but he was persistent and he kept going in spite of the odds. Job’s story is relevant for our time in that it raises many questions about the suffering of the innocent.

Christmas Giving Tree

St. Andrew will be doing a Giving Tree for needy families with children enrolled at Barnes Elementary again this year. Like all of us, these parents yearn to make the holidays sparkle for their children, and we can help.

Just as we did with Thanksgiving Boxes, we’ll be providing gift cards in 2020, giving parents the opportunity to shop for what their families need most. You can donate to the cause by sending a check made out to St. Andrew with Giving Tree in the memo line. If you prefer to give electronically, select “Give” on the menu bar of St. Andrew’s website, then “Click here to give now.” Once you’ve signed in to your account, select the green “Give” button and then choose the fund “Christmas Giving Tree.”

Questions? Please call Donna Brocker at 503-502-6156. And read about the challenges one family is facing below:

One Family’s Story

Matt & Carolyn, both of whom lost their jobs due to the coronavirus, have eight children—two biological children, Carolyn’s sister’s four kids, and two younger foster children, one of whom has special needs. They’ve been fortunate to be able to keep their apartment, but food is their number one priority this Christmas season. Carolyn is also determined to emphasize reading in her home, so books suitable for children ages 2-10 are another wish she has for Christmas. In addition, at least a couple of the children need coats. Little bodies grow quickly.

Matt & Carolyn worry about when they’ll be able to return to work, about keeping their children fed and healthy, about keeping them warm and well-occupied when so much of normal life has been disrupted. If you have the wherewithal to help relieve their worries, please donate to St. Andrew’s Giving Tree ministry.

Advent Devotional

Allison Katsufrakis, Libby Calhoun, and Deacon Susan Reiser have created a family friendly devotional for every day in Advent. There is an Advent wreath to color as the weeks progress.

For each day of the season, there is a picture to color, a scripture passage, and a suggestion for an action to take in your home. The scripture passages come from a variety of sources, so even if you think you know the story you might discover new insights. Take some time during this busy season to pause and reflect on the gift of the Word made flesh. Visit the St. Andrew website Worship page to find the Advent Devotional.

Let’s Talk, Let’s Listen Reboot

Last summer, the St. Andrew MACG Core Team organized a listening campaign, encouraging members to make phone calls to people we missed seeing at church. Now that this unusual holiday season has arrived, and the colder weather prevents outdoor gatherings, it’s time to check in once again. Look for details in early January about how to be a part of this reboot.

In the meantime, please let the Core Team know how we can improve the program. Contact any of us—Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, Scott Taylor, Bob Stadel, Victoria Kovalenko, Lynn Santelmann, or Pastor Robyn—if you
have any feedback.

Rebuilding and Recovery

It has been a couple of months now since John and Christine Core lost their home and almost everything they owned in one of the wildfires that ravaged Oregon. If you’d like to help them get reestablished, please consider donating to their Go Fund Me account, which was set up to make this season more joyful for them. If you have questions, please contact Michael & Barbara Keys at 971-219-2820.

Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker (on call Fridays & Saturdays)
office: 503-646-0629 (extension 201)
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig (on call Sundays & Mondays)
Office: 503-646-0629 (extension 211)
PastorRobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

Leadership Training Opportunity

Plan now to attend a FREE leadership training institute through the magic of the Internet in December.

Come to learn fundamental organizing skills: Individual relational meetings, listening sessions, research and action to help obtain a concrete, winnable outcome.

Come to strengthen our institutions: Engage people systematically in a culture that is relational, action-oriented, and reflective.

Come to learn to distinguish problems from issues: From general problems to concrete, winnable issues by using relational power in the public arena to negotiate for the common good.

The eight-hour training will be held from 6:00-8:00 pm PST on:
Tuesday, December 8
Thursday, December 10
Tuesday, December 15
Thursday, December 17

Many St. Andrew members have taken this training (often more than once), and all have reported taking away important skills that strengthen our St. Andrew community, as well as skills that are useful in their lives outside of St. Andrew.

Click here to register. After registering, you will receive a confirmation e-mail containing information about joining the meeting.

Questions? Please contact any member of the St. Andrew MACG Core Team: Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, Lynn Santelmann, Scott Taylor, Victoria Kovalenko, Bob Stadel, LuAnn Staul, or Pastor Robyn. If you have any problems with registration, e-mail Mary Nemmers.

Opportunities for Reckoning with Racism

Our St. Andrew Reckoning with Racism cohort is just completing our first quarter and preparing to start up again with 200 other people of faith on Zoom in January. If you’d like to join the 16 people in our cohort, please watch the videos of the sessions of our first quarter. The password is RwR*202021 .

Beginning in January, we’ll gather on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month (January 12 & 26, February 9 & 23, March 9 & 23, April 13 & 27, May 11 and 25, June 8 & 22). Please be in touch with Pastor Robyn if you would like more information or would like to join our cohort.

Greeting Cards Redux

Many thanks for both the used and the unused greeting cards put into the collection box in Fellowship Hall. I have turned many used cards into gift tags and gift bags. The unused cards are matched with envelopes and sent
on to bless both senders and receivers. Thank you for recycling!

Pam Meredith

Editor’s Note:
If you’d like to contribute to Pam’s Card Ministry while the pandemic continues to keep the church doors locked, simply drop them off at the Narthex entrance. You’ll find a bin behind the food collection barrel. We’ll make sure Pam continues to be well-stocked with cards.

Caroling in 2020

December is the opportunity to sing Christmas Carols to those in our congregation unable to join us for worship and other activities. But, this year, of course, the pandemic means we’re unable to visit people in person.

In order to fill that gap, the three sisters—Carol Werner, Susan Werner Reiser, and Kristie Werner Gladhill—have created a short recording of our favorite carols. We hope they are your favorites, too.

After this weekend, you can find the recording on the St. Andrew website Worship page. Simply click on “Worship” on the menu/navigation bar at the top of this website.

Please sing along!

Managing Your Mental Health During an Unusual Holiday Season

Many of us have found it particularly challenging to manage our own mental health as the pandemic continues, holiday plans are changed, and life as we knew it seems farther and farther away. The Caring Ministries Team recommends a series of articles found on the website for Mental Health USA. This week, take a look at their suggestions for maintaining your own mental health during this unusual holiday season

Take some time this week to work on one of St. Andrew’s Core Values: Self Care.

St. Andrew Caring Ministries Team

Pandemic Prayer

While we might be feeling worn down and depleted by ongoing pandemic restrictions, Rev. Richard Bott, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, has composed a prayer that reminds us of the link between “a simple piece of cloth” and sacrament:

A Prayer for Putting on a Face Mask
Creator God, as I prepare to go into the world,
help me to see the sacramental nature of this cloth.
Let it be a tangible and visible way of living love
for my neighbors, as I love myself.

Christ Jesus, since my lips will be covered, uncover my heart,
that people would see my smile in the crinkles around my eyes.
Since my voice may be muffled, help me to speak clearly,
not only with my words, but with my actions.

Holy Spirit, as the elastic touches my ears,
remind me to listen carefully and caringly to all those I meet.
May this simple piece of cloth be shield and banner,
and may each breath that it holds be filled with your love.
In your name and in that love I pray.
Amen.

Stock Donation Transfer Process for 2020

Greetings from the Financial Secretaries of St. Andrew. As the end of the calendar year approaches, we want to streamline the process of donating stock to the church since we are volunteering our time remotely from our homes.

Contributions must actually be paid before the close of year to be deductible in 2020. Please allow at least 3 weeks for the completion of the transfer. Please start the process as soon as possible.

We ask you to take the necessary steps if you intend to donate stock to St. Andrew this tax year:

  1. Download the Stock Transfer Form found on our church website or contact the church office.
  2. Contact your brokerage firm to initiate an electronic transfer of securities (see form for instructions/details).
  3. Complete the form including your intentions for the use of the donation and email a copy to our confidential e-mail address. You may instead send a copy to the church office marked confidential for Financial Secretaries. This form must be turned in at the beginning of the process. Without this form, we cannot complete your request.
  4. Upon receipt of the form, one of the financial secretaries will be in contact with you regarding the progress of the electronic stock transfer to the church’s securities firm, Charles Schwab.

Thank you for your generosity to the Mission and Ministry of St. Andrew.

Tammy Piscitelli, 503-307-8837
on behalf of the Financial Secretaries and Finance Team

Spirituality Book Group News

Fran Miller will lead the discussion when the Spirituality Book Group meets on Sunday, December 13, at 3:00 pm to discuss The Nickel Boys, by Colson Whitehead. The book won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2020.

“Based on the real story of a reform school in Florida that operated for 111 years and warped the lives of thousands of children, The Nickel Boys is a devastating, driven narrative that showcases a great American novelist writing at the height of his powers,” says one review on Amazon.

A Zoom link will be sent out to all who are on the Spirituality Book Group e-mail list a few days before the meeting. If you are not on the list, but would like to attend, please contact Mary Smith.

Future Reading

January (Date TBA)
Book: She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders, by Jennifer Boylan
Discussion Leader: TBA

February (Date TBA)
Book: Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Discussion Leader: TBA

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Larry Mostaert (cousin) Peace and God’s comfort at his death Pastor Robyn Hartwig
Family and friends of Jim Smith (Gerald’s twin) Peace and God’s comfort at his death Mary Smith
Eunice Harrum Peace and comfort in hospice care Francine Cach
Dan (brother-in-law) Proper diagnosis and effective treatment Judy
Scholz
Joyce (sister) and husband Dan Safety while Dan is in a hospital plagued by COVID Judy Scholz
Bob Brown Successful treatment for diabetic retinopathy Mary Brown
Carol Hogan Effective treatment and improved test results Carol Hogan
Joyce Larsen (grandmother) Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Cole Petersburg
All those struggling with mental health challenges Healing and calm Staff
Suzanne Warnes Thanksgiving for the end of her radiation treatment Staff
Health care workers Strength, courage, protection, and support Staff
Bishop Laurie Larson Caesar
Oregon Synod and Staff
Strength and wisdom Staff
Refugees and immigrants Acceptance, safety, and just treatment Staff
Military personnel, especially
Justina Hailey Hope Brocker,
Evan Dahlquist,
Dawson Dethlefs,
Neil Fiegenbaum,
and Jerami Reyna
Courage and protection Staff
New Life Lutheran Church (Florence, OR)
Bethany Lutheran church (Gold Beach, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Bethany Musallah (Portland, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

Christmas Eve: Birthday Party for Jesus!

This Advent, our annual family-focused Christmas Eve service will look a little different than usual. At 4:00 pm on Thursday, December 24, join us via Zoom for a special Birthday Party for Jesus, featuring carols, games, and a visit from our favorite furry friends! We would love it if you would join us to celebrate the holiday. Families are encouraged to dress for the occasion, whether that be with ugly Christmas sweaters or with party hats and balloons!

Plus, we’ll be giving a special birthday gift to Jesus during the event by doing something nice for others. If you’d like to contribute to this gift, you can do so online at the church website or by mailing a check to the church; just make sure to mark it for the Birthday Party for Jesus. Keep an eye out for the Zoom link for this event in the “Worship Links” e-mail the week of Christmas Eve. We hope to see you there!

Thank You

Again, I say thank you to my caring and loving friends at St. Andrew for the prayers, cards, calls, and encouraging words that you shared as I underwent an additional procedure on my right knee. I am progressing well in my rehab and anticipate returning to long walks and golf all in good time. I am truly blessed. Your ongoing kindness, caring, and support are much appreciated.

Gratefully,
Bob Cornie

Preparing for Next Sunday

December 13, 2020

Reading: Isaiah 61: 1-4
Gospel:
John 1: 6-8, 19-28

Go to “Preparing for Worship” for the bulletins, the complete Lectionary, and more.

Highlights for the Week

Go to the complete online church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, December 6, Second Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education: Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Tuesday, December 8

9:00 Facility Management Team Meeting Zoom
10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
1:30 am Service Committee Zoom
6:00 pm HR Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Finance Team Meeting Zoom

Wednesday, December 9 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

6:00 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm Holden Evening Prayer Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer & other breakout room opportunities Zoom

Thursday, December 10

12:00 pm Team Ministry Meeting Zoom

Friday, December 11

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
7:00 pm St. Andrew Movie Night Discussion : The Christmas Carol Zoom

Sunday, December 13, Second Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




November 29, 2020

No Education Classes This Week

Please remember that there will be no education classes this coming Sunday. Adult Education, High School Youth Group, Confirmation, and Sunday School will all resume at 10:00 am on Sunday, December 6, the Second Sunday of Advent.

Worship Connection Problems?

St. Andrew’s tech team is offering a new service on Sundays for anyone having difficulty connecting to worship. Between 8:00 am and 1:00 pm, you can simply call the church office at 503-646-0629 to get help from the pros.

Remember that Rebecca Fako Uecker also continues to offer technical help for church-related purposes. You can contact her via email.

Help with Rent, Utilities, and Childcare

The director of Family Promise has informed its host coordinators that it has funds available for people needing help paying for childcare, rent, or utilities during this time of extraordinary need. People needing assistance are welcome to call Family Promise at 971-217-8949. Please be aware that these funds need to be used by the end of this calendar year.

Table Talk: What the Voters Are Trying to Tell Us

Gathered around the table in his home, Martin Luther talked freely and openly with his colleagues and students about matters of faith, theology, and varied aspects of daily life. In an effort to cultivate this kind of spirited discussion, we have a tradition at St. Andrew of gathering for Table Talks. Though we cannot gather in person, Pastor Brocker invites you to participate in the next Table Talk via Zoom on Tuesday, December 1, 7:00-8:00 pm.

In this Table Talk we will focus on sharing reflections on the presidential election and the transition process that has followed. The voter turnout was record-setting. President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice-President Elect Kamala Harris received more votes than any ticket in U.S. history. President Trump and Vice President Pence received the second most votes ever.

In a New York Times editorial, published on November 5, two days after Election Day, when the final outcome was very much in doubt, David Brooks reflected on “What the Voters Are Trying to Tell Us”. To prepare for this Table Talk I encourage all participants to read this opinion piece. In light of the election and its aftermath, we will reflect on the political responsibility of the people of St. Andrew and the church as a whole going forward.

Giving Tree

St. Andrew will be doing a Giving Tree for needy families with children enrolled at Barnes Elementary again this year. Like all of us, these parents yearn to make the holidays joyful for their children, and we can help.

Just as we did with Thanksgiving Boxes, we’ll be providing gift cards in 2020, giving parents the opportunity to shop for their families. You can donate to the cause by sending a check made out to St. Andrew with Giving Tree in the memo line. If you prefer to give electronically, select “Give” on the menu bar of St. Andrew’s website, then “Click here to give now”. Once you’ve signed in to your account, select the green “Give” button and then choose the fund “Christmas Giving Tree.”

Questions? Please call Donna Brocker at 503-502-6156.


Family Stories from Barnes Elementary

Matt & Carolyn, both of whom lost their jobs due to the coronavirus, have eight children—two biological children, Carolyn’s sister’s four kids, and two younger foster children, one of whom has special needs. They’ve been fortunate to be able to keep their apartment, but food is their number one priority this Christmas season. Carolyn is also determined to emphasize reading in her home, so books suitable for children ages 2-10 are another wish she has for Christmas. In addition, at least a couple of the children need coats. Little bodies grow quickly.

Then there’s Chelsea, a single mom of three children, who are in 2nd, 4th, and 5th grade at Barnes. When she was asked what she needed most this holiday season, she replied that she would take less for her family if we could direct some help to her neighbor, Alicia, and her children as well. Alicia recently moved to Oregon from Georgia with her husband and three children, but she’s now parenting alone as he recently died from a heart attack at the age of 42. Alicia, who had a job in food service, is now unemployed and wanting to provide a lovely Christmas meal for her kids, who are in 1st, 2nd, and 4th grade. To conserve their very limited resources, Chelsea and Alicia and their children are planning to share an apartment. For these families, too, the most urgent need is food.

Matt & Carolyn, Chelsea, and Alicia worry about keeping their children fed and healthy, about keeping them warm and well-occupied when so much of normal life has been disrupted. If you have the wherewithal to help them bring a little joy into their Christmas this year, please donate to St. Andrew’s Giving Tree ministry.

Foundation Core Values, Part 1

Your St. Andrew Foundation adopted six core values at our recent strategic planning retreat. These are fundamental principles that guide the Foundation’s activities and decision-making. This week, we’ll highlight three of the new values.

  • VISIONARY: We are an active part of doing God’s will on earth. We are taking generational wealth and using it to seed bold, visionary efforts.
  • INTEGRITY: We are stewards of donations and a partner to grant recipients. We operate at the highest ethical standard and take responsibility for our actions.
  • SUSTAINABILITY & FINANCIAL STABILITY: We are proactive in growing and maintaining our finances so that they are sustainable into the future. We are investing money in ways that advance the St. Andrew Core Values.

Are you interested in learning more? Contact Sonja Ackman.

Stock Donation Transfer Process for 2020

Greetings from the Financial Secretaries of St. Andrew. As the end of the calendar year approaches, we want to streamline the process of donating stock to the church since we are volunteering our time remotely from our homes.

Contributions must actually be paid before the close of year to be deductible in 2020. Please allow at least 3 weeks for the completion of the transfer. Please start the process as soon as possible.

We ask you to take the necessary steps if you intend to donate stock to St. Andrew this tax year:

  1. Download the Stock Transfer Form found on our church website or contact the church office.
  2. Contact your brokerage firm to initiate an electronic transfer of securities (see form for instructions/details).
  3. Complete the form including your intentions for the use of the donation and email a copy to our confidential e-mail address. You may instead send a copy to the church office marked confidential for Financial Secretaries. This form must be turned in at the beginning of the process. Without this form, we cannot complete your request.
  4. Upon receipt of the form, one of the financial secretaries will be in contact with you regarding the progress of the electronic stock transfer to the church’s securities firm, Charles Schwab.

Thank you for your generosity to the Mission and Ministry of St. Andrew.

Tammy Piscitelli, 503-307-8837
on behalf of the Financial Secretaries and Finance Team

Leadership Training Opportunity

Plan now to attend a FREE leadership training institute through the magic of the Internet in December.

  • Come to learn fundamental organizing skills: Individual relational meetings, listening sessions, research and action to help obtain a concrete, winnable outcome.
  • Come to strengthen our institutions: Engage people systematically in a culture that is relational, action-oriented, and reflective.
  • Come to learn to distinguish problems from issues: From general problems to concrete, winnable issues by using relational power in the public arena to negotiate for the common good.

The eight-hour training will be held from 6:00-8:00 pm PST on:
Tuesday, December 8
Thursday, December 10
Tuesday, December 15
Thursday, December 17

Many St. Andrew members have taken this training (often more than once), and all have reported taking away important skills that strengthen our St. Andrew community, as well as skills that are useful in their lives outside of St. Andrew.

Click here to register. After registering, you will receive a confirmation e-mail containing information about joining the meeting.

Questions? Please contact any member of the St. Andrew MACG Core Team: Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, Lynn Santelmann, Scott Taylor, Victoria Kovalenko, Bob Stadel, LuAnn Staul, or Pastor Robyn. If you have any problems with registration, e-mail Mary Nemmers.

Opportunities for Reckoning with Racism

Our St. Andrew Reckoning with Racism cohort is just completing our first quarter and preparing to start up again with 200 other people of faith on Zoom in January. If you’d like to join the 16 people in our cohort, please watch the videos of the sessions of our first quarter. The password is RwR*202021 .

Beginning in January, we’ll gather on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month (January 12 & 26, February 9 & 23, March 9 & 23, April 13 & 27, May 11 and 25, June 8 & 22). Please be in touch with Pastor Robyn if you would like more information or would like to join our cohort.

To learn more about the origins of racism in Oregon:

1. Watch the OPB Documentary: “Oregon Black Pioneers.”

2. Explore more of the history of Black Americans throughout Oregon’s history at the Oregon Black Pioneers website.

3. Read Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory, by R. Gregory Nokes, a nonfiction account of the largely forgotten story of Oregon slavery.

4. Read A Light in the Wilderness, Oregonian writer Jane Kirkpatrick’s historical novel about the lives of three women of color in early Oregon history.

Rebuilding and Recovery

It has been a couple of months now since John and Christine Core lost their home and almost everything they owned in one of the wildfires that ravaged Oregon. If you’d like to help them get reestablished, please consider donating to their Go Fund Me account, which was set up to make this season more joyful for them. If you have questions, please contact Michael & Barbara Keys at 971-219-2820.

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Jim Smith (Gerald’s twin) Peace and God’s comfort at his death Mary Smith
Eunice Harrum Peace and comfort in hospice care Francine Cach
Colleen Warnes Peace and comfort in hospice care Suzanne Warnes
Suzanne Warnes Comfort and strength Staff
Bill Branch Comfort following esophageal cancer diagnosis Linda Fransen
Marcia Branch Comfort and strength Linda Fransen
Dan (brother-in-law) Proper diagnosis and effective treatment Judy
Scholz
Joyce (sister) and husband Dan Safety while Dan is in a hospital plagued by COVID Judy Scholz
Bob Brown Successful treatment for diabetic retinopathy Mary Brown
Bob Cornie Healing and recovery Staff
Joe Baker Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Joe Baker
Alvina Heidinger (mother-in-law) Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Judy Heidinger
Joyce Larsen (grandmother) Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Cole Petersburg
Cole Petersburg’s grandparents, Floyd & Marian Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Cole Petersburg
Health care workers Strength, courage, protection, and support Staff
Gloria Dei Lutheran Church (Coos Bay, OR)
Faith Lutheran Church (Coquille, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Congregation Neveh Shalom (Portland, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

December Movie Night

Do you like going to the movies? And talking about them afterward? We are planning monthly St. Andrew movie nights, COVID-style. We will select some movies to stream at home and then each month, we’ll invite you to bring out the popcorn and gather around your computer screens as we talk about what we liked (and didn’t like) about that month’s movie.

Our first Movie Night will be Friday, December 11, at 7:00 pm. Since it’s December, lets watch a classic—A Christmas Carol. I counted no less than 20 versions of this movie that can be streamed. Some are old black and white classics from as far back as 1938, some are animated, some are modern interpretations, as recent as 2020. You can stream many different versions on Amazon, some for free, some for a small rental fee. Or you may have your own favorite DVD of this classic at home. It will be fun to compare highlights with each other, as well as reflect on this beautiful story of redemption. This will also be a time to make suggestions for films for future movie nights.

You’ll find the Zoom link for our first Movie Night in Carol’s “Weekly News” e-mail on Friday, December 11.

Mary Smith

Worship Plan

Looking ahead to the coming seasons of the church, the Worship Planning Committee is announcing that current worship practices will continue through Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany.

To review, St. Andrew offers livestream worship via YouTube at 8:30 am on Sundays, with worship broadcast via Zoom at 11:00 am. Both services include the opportunity to share in remote Communion. Adult Education classes and gatherings for children, Confirmation students, and high school youth are all offered via Zoom, as is Wednesday Evening Prayer.

People without internet connection are able to listen to a recording of Sunday worship by calling 503-643-9416. Please see “Connecting to Worship at St. Andrew” for details.

Preparing for Next Sunday

December 6, 2020

Reading: Isaiah 40: 1-11
Gospel:
Mark 1: 1-8

Go to “Preparing for Worship” for the bulletins, the complete Lectionary, and more.


Given Governor Brown’s pause in Oregon’s reopening progression for Washington County, we ask that you please limit your visits to our church building. Coronavirus numbers are surging everywhere. If it is imperative that you visit the building, please remember to make arrangements with the office first.
Thank you!


Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker
is on call Fridays & Saturdays.
office: 503-646-0629 ext. 201
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig
is on call Sundays & Mondays.
503-646-0629 ext. 211
pastorrobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.


Highlights for the Week

Go to the church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, November 29, First Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am NO Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am NO Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am NO High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am NO Adult Education Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Monday, November 30

10:00 am Meals on Wheels/Loaves and Fishes off site

Tuesday, December 1

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
10:00 am Meals on Wheels/Loaves and Fishes off site
10:00 am Worship Planners Meeting Zoom
6:00 pm MACG Meeting Zoom

Wednesday, December 2 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

12:30 pm Bonhoeffer Seminar Zoom
6:00 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm Advent: Holden Evening Prayer Zoom
7:00 pm Wednesday Night Youth Hangout Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer Zoom

Thursday, December 3

12:00 pm Team Ministry Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Executive Council Committee Meeting Zoom

Friday, December 4

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd

Sunday, December 6, Second Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




November 22, 2020

Thanksgiving Eve

Please note that St. Andrew will not be offering Wednesday Evening Prayer on November 25, the eve of Thanksgiving Day. Instead, the worship team will be sharing a short recording that is meant to augment your celebration at home. Watch for a link to that in an e-mail from Allison Katsufrakis on Wednesday.

Adult Ed: Job’s Response to Misery

Join Steve Christiansen this Sunday, November 22, at 10:00 am for Session 5 of his adult education course on the book of Job. You can access the class using the same Zoom link needed for Sunday worship.

An incorrect translation has led us to believe that Job was a patient man. Not so, Christiansen explains, but he was persistent and he somehow kept going in spite of the odds. Job’s story is relevant for our time in that it raises many questions about the suffering of the innocent. Click for Steve’s session outline as well as videos of earlier classes.

Not yet receiving emails from St. Andrew? Click on the blue button to join the email list and receive the Zoom link for the class.

Worship Connection Problems?

St. Andrew’s tech team is offering a new service on Sundays for anyone having difficulty connecting to worship. Between 8:00 am and 1:00 pm, you can simply call the church office at 503-646-0629 to get help from the pros.

Remember that Rebecca Fako Uecker also continues to offer technical help for church-related purposes. You can contact her via email.

Help with Rent, Utilities, and Childcare

The director of Family Promise has informed its host coordinators that it has funds available for people needing help paying for childcare, rent, or utilities during this time of extraordinary need. People needing assistance are welcome to call Family Promise at 971-217-8949. Please be aware that these funds need to be used by the end of this calendar year.


Given Governor Brown’s pause in Oregon’s reopening progression for Washington County, we ask that you please limit your visits to our church building. Coronavirus numbers are surging everywhere. If it is imperative that you visit the building, please remember to make arrangements with the office first.
Thank you!


Table Talk: What the Voters Are Trying to Tell Us

Gathered around the table in his home, Martin Luther talked freely and openly with his colleagues and students about matters of faith, theology, and varied aspects of daily life. In an effort to cultivate this kind of spirited discussion, we have a tradition at St. Andrew of gathering for Table Talks. Though we cannot gather in person, Pastor Brocker invites you to participate in the next Table Talk via Zoom on Tuesday, December 1, 7:00-8:00 pm.

In this Table Talk we will focus on sharing reflections on the presidential election and the transition process that has followed. The voter turnout was record-setting. President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice-President Elect Kamala Harris received more votes than any ticket in U.S. history. President Trump and Vice President Pence received the second most votes ever.

In a New York Times editorial, published on November 5, two days after Election Day, when the final outcome was very much in doubt, David Brooks reflected on “What the Voters Are Trying to Tell Us”. To prepare for this Table Talk I encourage all participants to read this opinion piece. In light of the election and its aftermath, we will reflect on the political responsibility of the people of St. Andrew and the church as a whole going forward.

Giving Tree

St. Andrew will be doing a Giving Tree for needy families with children enrolled at Barnes Elementary again this year. Like all of us, these parents yearn to make the holidays joyful for their children, and we can help.

Just as we did with Thanksgiving Boxes, we’ll be providing gift cards in 2020, giving parents the opportunity to shop for their families. You can donate to the cause by sending a check made out to St. Andrew with Giving Tree in the memo line. If you prefer to give electronically, select “Give” on the menu bar of St. Andrew’s website, then “Click here to give now”. Once you’ve signed in to your account, select the green “Give” button and then choose the fund “Christmas Giving Tree.”

Questions? Please call Donna Brocker at 503-502-6156.


Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker
is on call Fridays & Saturdays.
office: 503-646-0629 ext. 201
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig
is on call Sundays & Mondays.
503-646-0629 ext. 211
pastorrobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.


New Foundation Vision Statement

Debut of the St. Andrew Foundation’s new vision statement, a product of our successful strategic planning retreat.

Your St. Andrew Foundation envisions a future where it…

  • Provides funding for creative worship, education, and outreach that are in alignment with Christian values
  • Is a preferred choice for foundation-type giving, with trusted investment and initiatives that resonate with and excite potential donors
  • Is well understood and embraced as an extension of the congregation’s ministries and priorities
  • Has a sustainable fund of at least $1 million

We are excited to put this vision into practice! Are you interested in learning more? Contact Sonja Ackman.

Stock Dona!on Transfer Process for 2020

Greetings from the Financial Secretaries of St. Andrew. As the end of the calendar year approaches, we want to streamline the process of donating stock to the church since we are volunteering our time remotely from our homes.

Contributions must actually be paid before the close of year to be deductible in 2020. Please allow at least 3 weeks for the completion of the transfer. Please start the process as soon as possible.

We ask you to take the necessary steps if you intend to donate stock to St. Andrew this tax year:

  1. Download the Stock Transfer Form found on our church website or contact the church office.
  2. Contact your brokerage firm to initiate an electronic transfer of securities (see form for instructions/details).
  3. Complete the form including your intentions for the use of the donation and email a copy to our confidential e-mail address. You may instead send a copy to the church office marked confidential for Financial Secretaries. This form must be turned in at the beginning of the process. Without this form, we cannot complete your request.
  4. Upon receipt of the form, one of the financial secretaries will be in contact with you regarding the progress of the electronic stock transfer to the church’s securities firm, Charles Schwab.

Thank you for your generosity to the Mission and Ministry of St. Andrew.

Tammy Piscitelli, 503-307-8837
on behalf of the Financial Secretaries and Finance Team

Leadership Training Opportunity

Plan now to attend a FREE leadership training institute through the magic of the Internet in December.

  • Come to learn fundamental organizing skills: Individual relational meetings, listening sessions, research and action to help obtain a concrete, winnable outcome.
  • Come to strengthen our institutions: Engage people systematically in a culture that is relational, action-oriented, and reflective.
  • Come to learn to distinguish problems from issues: From general problems to concrete, winnable issues by using relational power in the public arena to negotiate for the common good.

The eight-hour training will be held from 6:00-8:00 pm PST on:
Tuesday, December 8
Thursday, December 10
Tuesday, December 15
Thursday, December 17

Many St. Andrew members have taken this training (often more than once), and all have reported taking away important skills that strengthen our St. Andrew community, as well as skills that are useful in their lives outside of St. Andrew.

Click here to register. After registering, you will receive a confirmation e-mail containing information about joining the meeting.

Questions? Please contact any member of the St. Andrew MACG Core Team: Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, Lynn Santelmann, Scott Taylor, Victoria Kovalenko, Bob Stadel, LuAnn Staul, or Pastor Robyn. If you have any problems with registration, e-mail Mary Nemmers.

Reckoning with Racism

The Oregon Black Pioneers Organization, through extensive and continuing research into the origins of racism in Oregon, has brought together many valuable resources. The St. Andrew Team attending the Reckoning With Racism series would like to share these resources with the rest of the congregation. They provide an excellent background to understand systemic racism, especially in our own state of Oregon.

1. Watch the OPB Documentary: “Oregon Black Pioneers.”

2. Explore more of the history of Black Americans throughout Oregon’s history at the Oregon Black Pioneers website.

3. Read Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory, by R. Gregory Nokes, a nonfiction account of the largely forgotten story of Oregon slavery.

4. Read A Light in the Wilderness, Oregonian writer Jane Kirkpatrick’s historical novel about the lives of three women of color in early Oregon history.

Future Opportunities

Our St. Andrew Reckoning with Racism cohort is just completing our first quarter and preparing to start up again with 200 other people of faith on Zoom in January. If you’d like to join the 16 people in our cohort, please watch the videos of the sessions of our first quarter. The password is RwR*202021 .

Beginning in January, we’ll gather on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month (January 12 & 26, February 9 & 23, March 9 & 23, April 13 & 27, May 11 and 25, June 8 & 22). Please be in touch with Pastor Robyn if you would like more information or would like to join our cohort.

Pandemic Prayer

While we might be feeling worn down and depleted by ongoing pandemic restrictions, Rev. Richard Bott, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, has composed a prayer that reminds us of the link between “a simple piece of cloth” and sacrament:

A Prayer for Putting on a Face Mask

Creator God, as I prepare to go into the world,
help me to see the sacramental nature of this cloth.
Let it be a tangible and visible way of living love
for my neighbors, as I love myself.

Christ Jesus, since my lips will be covered, uncover my heart,
that people would see my smile in the crinkles around my eyes.
Since my voice may be muffled, help me to speak clearly,
not only with my words, but with my actions.

Holy Spirit, as the elastic touches my ears,
remind me to listen carefully and caringly to all those I meet.
May this simple piece of cloth be shield and banner,
and may each breath that it holds be filled with your love.

In your name and in that love I pray.
Amen.

Practicing Patience

In her message to the Oregon Synod on Wednesday this week, Bishop Laurie Larson Caesar noted that Governor Kate Brown was joined by Dr. Esther Choo, an emergency medicine physician at Oregon Health & Science University at a press briefing the day before. The doctor delivered an emotional plea for all of us to adhere to the new restrictions, saying “Right now, we’re asking you to be our heroes.” By the actions we take, we can help save her life, the lives of her family members, neighbors and friends, and essential workers across the state.

Last week, nearly 6,000 new cases of COVID-19 were diagnosed across Oregon. Gatherings, even those that include small numbers of families from different households, are the source of many of these new infections.

“So, I ask you to practice love, to practice safety, and to practice patience,” Bishop Laurie writes. “Patience is an important part of the fruit of the Spirit. (Galatians 5:22)

“Patience does note mean to sit and do nothing as we wait,” the bishop continues. “Patience is daring to stay in the place we are, as hard as it can be sometimes, and seeking God’s glimpses of life in the situation while trusting that something hidden will become manifest to us.

“This kind of Holy Spirit presence, waiting yet active in the already/not yet, can’t be done alone. We need the support, encouragement, love and forgiveness of God and of one another. So here are three ideas for practicing patience together. First, by simply breathing with one another in silent meditation. Second, by praying to God with each other for the patience we need. And third, by practicing gratitude, intentionally looking for, naming out loud with someone, and thanking God for what God is already doing in our lives. Remember that patience in Christ requires practice: the more we do it, the better we get at it.”

Struggling in Christ’s patience alongside of you,
Bishop Laurie

A Different Kind of Thanksgiving

Strict new Oregon guidelines highly recommend that no more than six people from two different households gather together during this two-week freeze period that continues through December 2. That will make Thanksgiving look different for many of us.

While health officials prefer that we not mix households at all, steps can be taken to make the celebration safer if you do decide to gather.

In addition to wearing masks, maintaining a six-foot distance, and washing or disinfecting your hands frequently, recommendations from the CDC are to:

  • Bring your own food, drinks, plates, cups, and utensils.
  • Wear a mask, and safely store your mask while eating and drinking.
  • Avoid going in and out of the areas where food is being prepared or handled, such as the kitchen.
  • Choose single-use options, such as salad dressing and condiment packets, and disposable items such as food containers, plates, and utensils.
  • Open windows to make celebrating indoors a bit safer.
  • Have guests bring their own food and drink.
  • If sharing food, designate one person to serve, relying on single-use options such as plastic utensils. Do not pass the green bean casserole.

Other options to consider are to gather electronically by Zoom, Skype, or Facetime Portal. You might decide to safely prepare traditional dishes and deliver them to family or neighbors in a way that does not involve contact with others (for example, leave them on the porch).

However you celebrate Thanksgiving in 2020, whether you’re part of a small group or alone, participate in a gratitude activity. Get creative. Make a gratitude jar filled with things you’re thankful for, or create a Blessings Garland that enumerates all the ways you’re blessed. Drape it on the mantel or over a doorway to remind you that, despite every uncertainty, life is good. Design a gratitude journal to remember this year of the pandemic and the good things that happened to see you through uncertain times.

Finally, call or write some of the people you love and tell them why you’re thankful that they are a part of your life. Dare to express your feelings—even to that stiff uncle who is really uncomfortable being hugged.

Children’s Sermon: The Oregon Grape

Editor’s Note: This is the fourth in our series of five Children’s Sermons introducing young people to Oregon’s native plants.

Hello, I am LuAnn Staul. You may know me as Henry and Penelope’s grandma.

I want to introduce you to another native plant, the Indian Plum The Indian Plum’s scientific name is Oemleria cerasiformis and it has many common names, including the osoberry, Oregon plum, Indian peach, and bird cherry. This plant grows along the Pacific Coast of North America in British Columbia, Canada, Washington, Oregon, and Northern California.

The fruits of the Indian Plum can be eaten and look like clusters of small plums which are dark blue when ripe.

This plant is especially important to pollinators. Pollinators get food in the form of energy-rich nectar and protein-rich pollen from the flowers they visit. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, and beetles are all pollinators. Once the pollinator has visited a flower it carries the pollen to other flowers; this makes it possible for the pollinated flowers to develop and produce seed.

Pollination is required to produce many of your favorite foods—apples, pears, cherries, and blueberries. Pollinators also support our ecosystem and natural resources by helping plants reproduce.

The Indian Plum is especially important because it is one of the first plants to leaf out and develop flowers. It develops leaves and flowers in early March before many other plants begin to flower. This provides an early source of pollen for bees and other pollinators.

The indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest included Indian Plum fruit in their diets, and they used the plant’s bark and twigs to make tea and medicine. The fruit is also eaten by small mammals like mice and voles, plus foxes, coyotes, deer, bear, and many bird species.

Indian Plum is a tall shrub growing up to 15 feet high. It has multiple trunks that grow upright. The flowers are white and whitish green. The fruit occurs in clusters and is orange and yellow when young but blue-black as it ripens. The plant grows in part to full shade in soil that is dry to moist.

Planting native plants like the Indian Plum provides food for pollinators as well as other native animals. If we all begin adding these plants to our years, we will be on our way to develop a Homegrown National Park in our community.

4 Senses: Hearing, Smelling, Seeing, Feeling

Fall has never been my favorite season. I miss the warm days of summer with sunlight from early morning till mid-evening, so many flowers, bare feet, and my birthday month.

But this fall is teaching me something new. Maybe it‘s the isolation and lack of stimulation brought on by our COVID prevention measures—staying home, avoiding people outside of my household, cancelling travel, missing piano lessons. But I’ve rediscovered a childlike pleasure.

I take walks in my neighborhood most mornings. It’s early. The sun (when it shows through the clouds) is low in the eastern sky. The air is crisp. My neighborhood has lots of walk route possibilities. We have a wonderful trail that can take us across bridges over the wetlands, up hills, into the trees. But these days, I’m avoiding the trail. It doesn’t allow a six-foot distance unless someone steps off the path into the grass. And still, amazingly to me, people aren’t wearing masks, nor do they even have one resting on their chins to pull up when they do meet someone.

Instead, I’m sticking to the sidewalks. The good thing about sidewalks is that they usually are on both sides of the street. So, when you see someone approaching, you or they can switch to the other side. Sometimes, amusingly, both of you start to switch at the same time, which brings smiles and waves, and an unspoken agreement as to WHO will go.

The fall leaves are glorious right now. They are rapidly falling from the trees and piling up on the sidewalks. And I can’t help it. When I get to a pile, I start dragging my feet and swishing my way through,, leaving two trails behind me.

I find as I’m swishing, that my mind goes free from my worries about COVID, the transition of power in our nation’s leadership, my tasks for the day, what’s for dinner. I am totally in the moment, enjoying the rustling sounds, the leafy smells, the rich colors, and the crunchy leaves lightly brushing against my feet. (I haven’t tasted them yet. I’ll save that sense for the hot cider, beef stew, crisp apples, and fresh pumpkin pie.)

It happens every time I come to a pile. And no one can see it, but under my mask a big, involuntary grin crosses my face. And I begin to look ahead for the next pile of leaves. I’ll even cross the street for it. I kinda like fall this year.

Beverly Briggs
November 9, 2020

Preparing for Next Sunday

November 29, 2020

Reading: Isaiah 64:1-9
Gospel:
Mark 13:24-37

Go to “Preparing for Worship” for the bulletins, the complete Lectionary, and more.

Managing Your Mental Health During a Tense Political Climate

The election may be over, but as we know, the tense climate continues. Many of us have found it particularly challenging to manage our own mental health as the pandemic continues, holiday plans are changes, and life as we knew it seems farther and farther away.

The Caring Ministries Team recommends a series of articles found on the website for Mental Health USA. This week, take a look at their suggestions for managing your mental health during a tense political climate.

Your health matters. Focus this week on one of St. Andrew’s Core Values: Self Care.

St. Andrew Caring Ministries Team

Join Our Delegate Assembly

Please join other members of MACG institutions in the tri-county area on Thursday, December 3, from 6:30-8:00 pm via Zoom. Commissioners from all three counties, including our own Pam Treece, have been invited to come and talk with us about their plans to address the housing crisis and pandemic management in the near and far term.

As a member of St. Andrew, you are a member of MACG. A link to register will be included in next week’s “Weekly News,” but for now, please put this meeting on your calendar and plan to join us if you can.

Questions? Contact Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, or any member of the St. Andrew MACG Core Team: Lynn Santelmann, Scott Taylor, Victoria Kovalenko, Bob Stadel, LuAnn Staul, or Pastor Robyn.

Thank You, Scouts!

As we approach Advent and the joyful season of Christmas, St. Andrew extends an enormous thank you to our Scout Troop 618, 5618, and Crew 618 for providing “Be Merry” centerpieces for many of our homebound parishioners.

Thanks, too, to the St. Andrew volunteers who will deliver the centerpieces next week.

If nothing else, 2020 has reminded us that such acts of kindness are precious, indeed. As Jesus tells us in this week’s Gospel lesson (Matthew 25:31-46), when all the nations are gathered before God, the king will say to his blessed people, “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.”

Advent is Coming

The new church year begins next Sunday, November 29, with the First Sunday of Advent. During Advent, a feature of our worship services is the lighting of the advent wreath.

Since we are joining together via the Internet this year, the Worship Planning Team encourages you to bring your own advent wreath when you connect to worship each Sunday. If you need some ideas about how to make your own wreath, check out this
website for Sunday School teachers.

These are fun! You’ll find a mobile advent wreath that kids can carry with them if they like (think pipe cleaners), traditional advent wreaths, a battery candle wreath dressed up with washi tape, paper wreaths, even a wreath you can eat! Be sure to check out the Bonus Take-Home Craft for the edible version. That last one is too tasty to last throughout Advent, but you can replicate it each Sunday.


The Season of Advent

Did you know that Advent begins on the Sunday closest to November 30 and lasts between 22 and 28 days, ending on Christmas Eve? Advent includes the first four Sundays of the church year and it embodies a special time of anticipation.

Advent means “coming.” Historically, it was a time of preparation through repentance, but it has also become a season to look forward with hope as we prepare to celebrate Christ’s first coming as the babe in Bethlehem. Advent is a time to also ponder Christ’s coming at the end of time as our judge and redeemer.

Traditionally, the color associated with Advent was purple, a royal color for Christ the Ruler and the color of penitence. Many churches now choose blue for Advent, though, because it is believed to symbolize hope and the truth of Christ. Blue is also the color associated with Mary.

The most recognized symbol of Advent is the advent wreath, with its four candles often associated with Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love. The candle at the center of the wreath represents Christ.

Other symbols of Advent include:

  • the Alpha and Omega, meaning the beginning and the end
  • an angel, a reminder of the angel who visited Mary
  • trumpets, heralding Christ coming to earth and symbolizing the hope of Christ’s return
  • the crown, recognizing Christ as Ruler
  • the Lamb of God, echoing John the Baptist’s reference to Jesus as the Lamb of God carrying the banner of victory over sin and death.

Many of these symbols of Advent are incorporated in the white and gold Chrismons that have decorated the Christmas tree in our sanctuary for decades.

Information provided in part by Lutheran Brotherhood

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Norm Smith’s wife Peace and God’s comfort at her death Del & Mary Nell Mahler
Jim Smith (brother-in-law) and his family Peace, comfort, and support as Jim is in hospice care Mary Smith
Paula Yazzolino Peace and comfort in hospice care Steve Buske
Pete Yazzolino Comfort and strength Steve Buske
Colleen Warnes and her family Effective treatment and plan for her future care Suzanne Warnes
Bill Branch Comfort following esophageal cancer diagnosis Linda Fransen
Marcia Branch Comfort and strength Linda Fransen
Bob Cornie Healing and recovery Staff
Joe Baker Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Joe Baker
Alvina Heidinger (mother-in-law) Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Judy Heidinger
Cole Petersburg’s grandparents Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Cole Petersburg
Hugh Newell (son) & Nicole Wilson Blessings on their marriage (November 17) Anne Newell
Those facing ongoing illness or distress: Tandy Brooks,
Dave Bumgardner,
Vic Claar,
Barry Larson,
Marvel Lund,
Ian MacDonald,
Gary Magnuson,
Hugh Mason,
Brian McKiernan,
Ed Pacey,
Corky Poppert,
Jolie Reyna,
Shane Throckmorton,
Gary Tubbs
Healing and assurance of God’s presence Staff
Bishop Elizabeth Eaton Wisdom and discernment Staff
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Blessings on our ministry Staff
Taiwan Lutheran Church Strength and wisdom Staff
Grace and Mercy Lutheran Church (Umatilla, OR)
Grace Lutheran Church (Vale, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Islamic Center (Portland and Beaverton, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

A Thanksgiving Prayer

Dear God,
We thank you for food
and we remember the hungry.
We thank you for health
and we remember the sick.
We thank you for freedom
and we remember the enslaved.
May these remembrances
stir us to service in your name.
Amen.

Worship Plan

Looking ahead to the coming seasons of the church, the Worship Planning Committee is announcing that current worship practices will continue through Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany.

To review, St. Andrew offers livestream worship via YouTube at 8:30 am on Sundays, with worship broadcast via Zoom at 11:00 am. Both services include the opportunity to share in remote Communion. Adult Education classes and gatherings for children, Confirmation students, and high school youth are all offered via Zoom, as is Wednesday Evening Prayer.

People without internet connection are able to listen to a recording of Sunday worship by calling 503-643-9416. Please see “Connecting to Worship at St. Andrew” for details.

Highlights for the Week

Go to the church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, November 22, Christ the King Sunday

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Tuesday, November 24

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
6:30 pm Reckoning with Racism Gathering with Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon Zoom

Wednesday, November 25 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

10:00 am Reopening Committee Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Thanksgiving Devotional Service YouTube

Thursday, November 26 – Happy Thanksgiving! Church office closed

Friday, November 27 – Church office closed for holiday

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd

Sunday, November 29, First Sunday of Advent

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




November 15, 2020

Adult Ed: Job’s Response to Misery

Join Steve Christiansen this Sunday, November 15, at 10:00 am for Session 4 of his adult education course on the book of Job. You can access the class using the same Zoom link needed for Sunday worship.

An incorrect translation has led us to believe that Job was a patient man. Not so, Christiansen explains, but he was persistent and he somehow kept going in spite of the odds. Job’s story is relevant for our time in that it raises many questions about the suffering of the innocent. Click for Steve’s session outline as well as videos of earlier classes.

Not yet receiving emails from St. Andrew? Click on the blue button to join the email list and receive the Zoom link for the class.

Thanksgiving is Coming!

The Service Committee is once again sponsoring Thanksgiving meals for Community Action families and we need your help. Community Action works with families on parenting, financial stability, housing, and education. These are families that really need help.

We will not be able to see those food boxes filling the Narthex this year due to COVID-19. Instead, we will be using money donated to Thanksgiving Food Box fund to purchase Winco gift cards for these families.

Last year we were able to donate 75 food boxes, which had a value of $50 each, to families in need. We would like to achieve this goal again this year; that will require $3,750 in donations. If you wish to give electronically, select Thanksgiving Boxes—or you can send a check made out to St. Andrew with Thanksgiving Food Drive in the memo line.

This is a wonderful way to live out our faith, as well as giving a needy family the chance to celebrate Thanksgiving with a delicious meal. Please consider helping with a donation of any amount this year. Our deadline for donation is November 15 to give us time to purchase gift cards and get them to these families.

Please email or call LuAnn Staul at 503-314-6321, or email or call Linda McDowall at 503-649-5091 with questions.

Given Governor Brown’s pause in Oregon’s reopening progression for Washington County, we ask that you please limit your visits to our church building. Coronavirus numbers are surging everywhere. If it is impera?ve that you visit the building, please remember to make arrangements with the office first.

Recognizing Our Veterans

In 2020, some 75 years after the end of World War II, we take time
to recognize all the men and women who either have served or are
currently serving our country in the armed services. Both in times
of peace and war, these individuals and their families deserve our
gratitude. Thank you for upholding our American values.

Spirituality Book Group

The Spirituality Book Group will meet via Zoom on Sunday, November 15, at 3:00 pm to discuss Barbara Kingsolver’s novel, Unsheltered. According to a review in USA Today, “Unsheltered’s title suggests a roof gone missing. But it’s also a resonant call to be more alert to our social predicaments, to ‘stand in the clear light of day.’”

The Zoom link will be sent to those on the Spirituality Book Group e-mail list before the meeting. Anyone is welcome to join the discussion. Please contact Mary Smith for the Zoom link.

Since we will also be discussing future reading at this meeting, please bring your ideas and recommendations. We will try to schedule books through June 2021.

Sunday, November 15, 3:00 pm
Book: Unsheltered, by Barbara Kingsolver
Discussion Leader: Mary Ann Snider

Sunday, December 13, 3:00 pm
Book: The Nickel Boys, by Colson Whitehead
Discussion Leader: Fran Miller

January (date TBA)
Book: She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders, by
Jennifer Boylan
Discussion Leader: TBA

New Foundation President, Mission Statement

Your St. Andrew Foundation board of directors has welcomed a new president, Sonja Ackman. On two Saturdays in September and October, the board conducted a virtual strategic planning retreat facilitated by Terry Buchholz. We had a great time and got a lot accomplished, even over Zoom!

This week, we want to highlight our new mission statement: “The mission of St. Andrew’s Foundation is to provide funding for efforts that grow the spiritual health, well-being, and ability of those serving God, both today and in the future, in ways that augment or extend the reach of the Church.”

Look for additional highlights over the next few weeks! Interested in learning more? Please email Sonja Ackman.

Help with Rent, Utilities, and Childcare

The director of Family Promise has informed its host coordinators that it has funds available for people needing help paying for childcare, rent, or utilities during this time of extraordinary need. People needing assistance are welcome to call Family Promise at 971-217-8949. Please be aware that these funds need to be used by the end of this calendar year.

Collins Summit: Shalom in Divided Times

What does shalom and unity look like in 2020, when racial unrest, political tensions, and COVID-19 have impacted nearly every aspect of our lives? This year at its Collins Summit, Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon is asking
how we bring our whole selves to the table and stay engaged in light of our differences, not in spite of them.

The Summit will include a lecture from Lisa Sharon Harper, founder and president of FreedomRoad.us and one of today’s leading voices on the topics of poverty, racial and gender justice, and transformational civic engagement.

Register now for the virtual event to be held Wednesday, November 18.

Worship Connection Problems?

St. Andrew’s tech team is offering a new service on Sundays for anyone having difficulty connecting to worship. Between 8:00 am and 1:00 pm, you can simply call the church office at 503-646-0629 to get help from the pros.

Remember that Rebecca Fako Uecker also continues to offer technical help for church-related purposes. You can contact her via email.

Thanksgiving Eve

Please note that St. Andrew will not be offering Wednesday Evening Prayer on November 25, the eve of Thanksgiving Day. Instead, the worship team will be sharing a recording of our pastors that is meant to augment your celebration at home.

Preparing for Next Sunday

November 22, 2020

Reading: Ezekiel 34:11-16, 20-24
Gospel:
Matthew 25:31-46

Notes from the Adult Library

So, there are new voices in St. Andrew’s library these days. Last week you heard from one of them, Barb Gutzler, the amazing new children’s librarian, and this week there is me, Pam Farr, explorer of the incredible adult library that started in like 1960 and has been guided by Mary Nell Mahler ever since. What a job she’s done! There are some super books in our collection. I’ve been reading titles as I go along checking their numerical order. Here are a few treasures I have found so far:

If you’re in charge of children in some form or another on a daily basis, you know the stresses of remote learning, school/no school can really get to them — and you. If you look in the 249s, you’ll find some activity books that may help you out.

I picked Families Sharing God, by Barbara Owen Webb. She’s got lots of craft projects that take stuff you probably have around the house, a few baking ideas, things for special seasons, ride-in-the-care games, and activities to do outside—all with a devotion attached. If the kids are too wiggly, do the craft first and work the devotion in as you can. These activities are aimed at youngsters 6 to 12 years old.

COVID being COVID (not a nice thing), maybe you’ve been thinking more about God, searching for reassurance or trying to learn more and have gotten hung up, like I do, on the big words. This is the book for you: Crazy Talk: A Not-So-Stuffy Dictionary of Theological Terms, edited by Rolf A. Jacobson. He has taken the big words and defined them in a simple, rather tongue-in-cheek way that makes you both understand and smile.

Lastly, we have a really nice copy of The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis, the guy who wrote the Narnia books. It’s about a devil in training and how he gets on. It just might give you some ideas about what you’re up against and perhaps how to derail him.

Best of reading!

Pam Farr, Adult Librarian

Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker
is on call Fridays & Saturdays.
office: 503-646-0629 ext. 201
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig
is on call Sundays & Mondays.
503-646-0629 ext. 211
pastorrobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

Children’s Sermon: The Oregon Grape

Editor’s Note: This is the third in our series of five Children’s Sermons introducing young people to Oregon’s native plants.

Good morning. My name is Larry Bliesner and I’m here to talk about a native plant. A native plant is one that is natural to our area. My plant is the Oregon Grape, which is Oregon’s State Flower.

Thanks for Making a Happy Reunion Possible

The Oregon Grape is actually an evergreen shrub. The tall variety grows 5-8 feet high. The low variety grows to about 2 feet. The Oregon Grape has yellow flowers in the spring, which hummingbirds like. During the summer the plant forms bluish-black berries which other birds like.

The Oregon Grape is not a true grape like the ones we eat. However, Kalapuyan indigenous peoples ate the berries, which are sour. The bark
could be used as a yellow color to dye native baskets, while the berries produce the color purple.

The Oregon Grape tolerates shade or sun. It is a good plant for your soil garden and for St. Andrew’s “homegrown” National Park.

Larry Bliesner

Thanks for Making a Happy Reunion Possible

Thanks so much to all of my St. Andrew family who pitched in to help me find my rescue dog Risa. After I had her for only four days she ran off and was missing for five days. It seems like a miracle that she was found, and I so appreciate the support from so many at St. Andrew, including walking through neighborhoods searching for her, passing out flyers, even setting up a Facebook page for her. And thanks for all the kind words of support during this trying time. Risa and I are happily reunited now, and we’re getting to know each other.

Mary Smith

Table Talk: What the Voters Are Trying to Tell Us

Gathered around the table in his home, Martin Luther talked freely and openly with his colleagues and students about matters of faith, theology, and varied aspects of daily life. In an effort to cultivate this kind of spirited discussion, we have a tradition at St. Andrew of gathering for Table Talks. Though we cannot gather in person, Pastor Brocker invites you to participate in the next Table Talk via Zoom on Tuesday, December 1, 7:00-8:00 pm.

In this Table Talk we will focus on sharing reflections on the presidential election and the transition process that has followed. The voter turnout was record-setting. President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice-President Elect Kamala Harris received more votes than any ticket in U.S. history. President Trump and VicePresident Pence received the second most votes ever.

In a New York Times editorial, published on November 5, two days after Election Day, when the final outcome was very much in doubt, David Brooks reflected on “What the Voters Are Trying to Tell Us”. To prepare for this Table Talk I encourage all participants to read this opinion piece. In light of the election and its aftermath, we will reflect on the political responsibility of the people of St. Andrew and the church as a whole going forward.

Leadership Training Opportunity

Plan now to attend a FREE leadership training institute through the magic of the Internet in December.

Come to learn fundamental organizing skills: Individual relational meetings, listening sessions, research and action to help obtain a concrete, winnable outcome.

Come to strengthen our institutions: Engage people systematically in a culture that is relational, action-oriented, and reflective.

Come to learn to distinguish problems from issues: From general problems to concrete, winnable issues by using relational power in the public arena to negotiate for the common good.

The eight-hour training will be held from 6:00-8:00 pm PST on:
Tuesday, December 8
Thursday, December 10
Tuesday, December 15
Thursday, December 17

Many St. Andrew members have taken this training (often more than once), and all have reported taking away important skills that strengthen our St. Andrew community, as well as skills that are useful in their lives outside of St. Andrew.

Click the link below to register:
https://tinyurl.com/MACG-Leadership-Registration

After registering, you will receive a confirmation e-mail containing information about joining the meeting.

Questions? Please contact any member of the St. Andrew MACG
Core Team: Pat Christiansen, Larry Bliesner, Lynn Santelmann,
Scott Taylor, Victoria Kovalenko, Bob Stadel, LuAnn Staul, or
Pastor Robyn. If you have any problems with registration, e-mail
Mary Nemmers.

Reckoning with Racism

The Oregon Black Pioneers Organization, through extensive and continuing research into the origins of racism in Oregon, has brought together many valuable resources. The St. Andrew Team attending the Reckoning With Racism series would like to share these resources with the rest of the congregation. They provide an excellent background to understand systemic racism, especially in our own state of Oregon.

1. Watch the following OPB Documentary: “Oregon Black Pioneers.” Long before Oregon became a state, black people were in the Far West. Some were brought to the region as slaves, but many others arrived as freemen looking for a new life. They opened boarding houses and stores, worked farms and mined for gold. But as more white settlers arrived over the Oregon Trail, the newcomers passed discriminatory laws to keep African Americans out. “Oregon Experience” examines the largely unknown history of Oregon’s black pioneers.

2. Explore more of the history of Black Americans throughout Oregon’s history at the Oregon Black Pioneers website.

3. Nonfiction read: Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory, by R. Gregory Nokes. This is a nonfiction account of the largely forgotten story of Oregon slavery. The book was a finalist for the 2014 Oregon Book Award for nonfiction. R. Gregory Nokes is a retired journalist (Associated Press and The Oregonian), writer, and lecturer, who now lives in West Linn.

4. Historical fiction read: A Light in the Wilderness, by Jane Kirkpatrick. Members of the St. Andrew Spirituality Book group will be familiar with the works of Oregonian writer Jane Kirkpatrick. In this novel she brings together the lives of three women of color in early Oregon history.

Stock Dona!on Transfer Process for 2020

Greetings from the Financial Secretaries of St. Andrew. As the end of the calendar year approaches, we want to streamline the process of donating stock to the church since we are volunteering our time remotely from our homes.

Contributions must actually be paid before the close of year to be deductible in 2020. Please allow at least 3 weeks for the completion of the transfer. Please start the process as soon as possible.

We ask you to take the necessary steps if you intend to donate
stock to St. Andrew this tax year:

  1. Download the Stock Transfer Form found on our church website or contact the church office.
  2. Contact your brokerage firm to initiate an electronic transfer of securities (see form for instructions/details).
  3. Complete the form including your intentions for the use of the donation and email a copy to our confidential e-mail address. You may instead send a copy to the church office marked confidential for Financial Secretaries. This form must be turned in at the beginning of the process. Without this form, we cannot complete your request.
  4. Upon receipt of the form, one of the financial secretaries will be in contact with you regarding the progress of the electronic stock transfer to the church’s securities firm, Charles Schwab.

Thank you for your generosity to the Mission and Ministry of St.
Andrew.

Tammy Piscitelli, 503-307-8837
on behalf of the Financial Secretaries and Finance Team

Finance Team: Johanna Au; Gretchen Bancroft; Bill Beavers; Brian Cheney; Joel Johnson; Anne Newell; Ted Miller; Tammy Piscitelli;
Tracie Brooks-Semenchalam

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Marilyn Hanson (mother) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Mark Hanson
Family and friends of Jean Pacey (wife) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Ed Pacey
Family and friends of Norm Smith’s wife Peace and God’s comfort at her death Del & Mary Nell Mahler
Family and friends of Robert Zahn (brother) Peace and God’s comfort at his death Anne Newell
Family and friends of Ellie Prink (aunt) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Carol Hogan
Family and friends of Carole Harmon Peace and God’s comfort at her death Pastor Robyn Hartwig
Jim Smith (brother-in-law) and his family Peace, comfort, and support as Jim is in hospice care Mary Smith
Paula Yazzolino Peace and comfort in hospice care Steve Buske
Pete Yazzolino Comfort and strength Steve Buske
Bill Branch Comfort Following esophageal cancer diagnosis Linda Fransen
Marcia Branch Comfort and strength Linda Fransen
Bob Cornie Successful knee procedure (November 18) Staff
Mary Brocker & Ethan Pearson Blessings on their engagement Mark & Donna Brocker
Louella Marie Mitchell (great niece) Blessings on her birth Susan Werner Reiser
Those confined to their homes:
Mareline Barnes,
Dave Bumgardner,
Jean Fredrickson,
Tara Harper,
Douglas Hooke,
Betty Horst,
Dorothy Moore,
Phyllis Morris,
Ed Pacey,
Helen Rogers,
Dave & Sharon Roth,
Margie Schindele
Assurance of God’s presence Staff
All who are imprisoned Peace and strength Staff
Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon
Holy Trinity Catholic Church
Blessings on their work Staff
Christ the King Lutheran Church (Milton-Freewater, OR)
Peace Lutheran Church (Pendleton, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Congregation Shaarie Torah (Portland, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

Wednesday Evening Meditation

Our midweek Prayer Services continue into the fall on Wednesday nights via Zoom. The service will focus on our role in creation, with music, prayer, meditations, and scripture. Please join us for any or all of these events on Wednesday, November 18:

     6:30 pm:  Informal Gathering Time
     7:00 pm:  Wednesday Evening Prayer
     7:30 pm:  Centering Prayer

Join us for any or all of these events. The connection link is sent out Wednesday afternoons, so please watch for it.

St. Andrew will not have Wednesday Evening Prayer the week of Thanksgiving.

Worship Plan

Looking ahead to the coming seasons of the church, the Worship Planning Committee is announcing that current worship practices will continue through Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany.

To review, St. Andrew offers livestream worship via YouTube at 8:30 am on Sundays, with worship broadcast via Zoom at 11:00 am. Both services include the opportunity to share in remote Communion. Adult Education classes and gatherings for children, Confirmation students, and high school youth are all offered via Zoom, as is Wednesday Evening Prayer.

People without internet connection are able to listen to a recording of Sunday worship by calling 503-643-9416. Please see “Connecting to Worship at St. Andrew” for details.

Highlights for the Week

Check the church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, November 15, Twenty-fourth Sunday of Pentecost

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Monday, November 16

1:00 pm Memorial Service for Jean Pacey Livestream
on YouTube

Tuesday, November 17

10:00 am Worship Planning Meeting Zoom
10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
12:15 pm Community Carbon Leadership Meeting Zoom

Wednesday, November 18 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

10:00 am Reopening Committee Meeting Zoom
6:00 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm High School Youth Game Night Zoom
7:00 pm Wednesday Evening Prayer Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer Zoom

Thursday, November 19

10:00 am Team Ministry Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Council Meeting Zoom

Friday, November 20

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd

Sunday, November 22, Christ the King Sunday

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School Kickoff (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  The Book of Job Zoom
11:00 am Zoom Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




November 8, 2020

Adult Ed: Job’s Response to Misery

Join Steve Christiansen this Sunday, November 8, at 10:00 am for Session 3 of his adult education course on the book of Job. You can access the class using the same Zoom link needed for Sunday worship.

An incorrect translation has led us to believe that Job was a patient man. Not so, Christiansen explains, but he was persistent and he somehow kept going in spite of the odds. Job’s story is relevant for our time in that it raises many questions about the suffering of the innocent. Click for Steve’s session outline as well as videos of earlier classes.

Not yet receiving emails from St. Andrew? Click on the blue button to join the email list and receive the Zoom link for the class.

Thanksgiving is Coming!

The Service Committee is once again sponsoring Thanksgiving meals for Community Action families and we need your help. Community Action works with families on parenting, financial stability, housing, and education. These are families that really need help.

We will not be able to see those food boxes filling the Narthex this year due to COVID-19. Instead, we will be using money donated to Thanksgiving Food Box fund to purchase Winco gift cards for these families.

Last year we were able to donate 75 food boxes, which had a value of $50 each, to families in need. We would like to achieve this goal again this year; that will require $3,750 in donations. If you wish to give electronically, select Thanksgiving Boxes—or you can send a check made out to St. Andrew with Thanksgiving Food Drive in the memo line.

This is a wonderful way to live out our faith, as well as giving a needy family the chance to celebrate Thanksgiving with a delicious meal. Please consider helping with a donation of any amount this year. Our deadline for donation is November 15 to give us time to purchase gift cards and get them to these families.

Please email or call LuAnn Staul at 503-314-6321, or email or call Linda McDowall at 503-649-5091 with questions.

Dismantling Racism in Institutions

Many of the stories and struggles of African Americans in Oregon are published at “A Hidden History Project.”

Other homework assigned to the 41 faith-based organizations like ours that are participating in the “Reckoning with Racism” process with Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon’s Common Table includes

Join us in any or all of our homework as you are so moved!

Pastor Robyn and the St. Andrew Team

St. Andrew’s Pandemic Protocols

  1. Call or email ahead to arrange building access (even if you have a key).
  2. Sign in at the table in the Narthex.
  3. Wash your hands or use the provided hand sanitzer after signing in.
  4. Wear a mask the entire time you are in the building.

With a third wave of infections sweeping the country, with the advent of flu season and cold temperatures that keep people inside, and with loving care for all members of our community so wearied by this pandemic, it’s more important now than ever to do all we can to protect ourselves and keep each other safe. Stay the course. Maintain the discipline that’s been effective so far.

Please note that the church building remains locked. Even if you have a key, we ask that you call or e-mail the church office to arrange access in advance of coming to St. Andrew. This allows us to monitor occupancy and prevent people from inadvertently interfering with others who need to come to the building to do their work. Please don’t assume you will be the only person inside. Staff continue to adjust their hours to prevent the spread of infection, while providing for online worship means that people are working in the building much of Saturday and Sunday.

When you do visit the building, we ask you to follow the protocols. Put on a mask before you even open the door, sign in at the round table in the Narthex, indicating what rooms you plan to visit, wash your hands, keep your mask on (covering both your mouth and nose) the entire time you’re inside, and remember to sign out at the time you leave. Use your own pen at the sign-in register or take a clean one from the left receptacle and deposit it in the used cup on the right.

We want you to have access to our libraries, to your mailboxes, and to the sacristy to prepare for worship. Individual Nifty Notters have worked in Fellowship Hall to finish projects. But our ministry groups are meeting online because it is so much safer. Be vigilant. Stay well! When we’re able to reopen, we want to welcome each and every one of you back inside the St. Andrew building!

Help with Rent, Utilities, and Childcare

The director of Family Promise has informed its host coordinators that it has funds available for people needing help paying for childcare, rent, or utilities during this time of extraordinary need. People needing assistance are welcome to call Family Promise at 971-217-8949. Please be aware that these funds need to be used by the end of this calendar year.

PLU Confirmation Scholarship

Last year Pacific Lutheran University expanded its PLU Confirmation Scholarship nationwide so that any student who has been confirmed in an ELCA congregation can receive the $1,500 per year Confirmation Scholarship. This award stacks on top of other PLU scholarships, including those for academic or artistic achievements.

The Confirmation Scholarship form must be completed and submitted by a church official (pastor, youth leader, etc.) before the student’s high school graduation. Go online to learn more about Pacific Lutheran University.

PLU is a private liberal arts Lutheran university in Parkland, WA, that was founded by Norwegian Lutheran immigrants in 1890.

Collins Summit: Shalom in Divided Times

What does shalom and unity look like in 2020, when racial unrest, political tensions, and COVID-19 have impacted nearly every aspect of our lives? This year at its Collins Summit, Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon is asking
how we bring our whole selves to the table and stay engaged in light of our differences, not in spite of them.

The Summit will include a lecture from Lisa Sharon Harper, founder and president of FreedomRoad.us and one of today’s leading voices on the topics of poverty, racial and gender justice, and transformational civic engagement.

Register now for the virtual event to be held Wednesday, November 18.

Preparing for Next Sunday

November 15, 2020

Reading: Zephaniah 1:7, 12-18
Gospel: Matthew 25:14-30

Notes from the Children’s Library

This fall I’ve enjoyed weekly visits to St. Andrew’s Children’s Library as I work to organize, catalog, and cover books. Each time, I grow even more appreciative of the time and care Mary Nell put into developing a truly impressive collection nearing 10,000 items, more than two-thirds of which are found in the Children’s Library on the lower level.

With so many wonderful books and a beautiful facility, all we need is to find ways for our members and community to access them. Now that public and school libraries are offering very limited—if any—access, our church library has resources for students, parents, and teachers. We welcome families to contact Carol Harker in the church office and prearrange a time to visit. Everyone needs to wear a mask and follow the directions posted on the front entry doors.

Another option is to send me an e-mail and I will gather an assortment of books based on your interests, which you can then arrange to pick up in the Narthex. Let me know your child’s interests and age. If you’d like books that match your child’s reading level, send me their AR, DRA, or Lexile score.

Barbara Gutzler, Children’s Librarian

P.S. A future goal is to put our collection online so you can browse all our titles. In the meantime, here are a few new additions to the Children’s Library.

Wild Symphony, by Dan Brown
Yes, this is the author who also wrote The DaVinci Code and many other fast-paced, bestselling novels for adults. His early career led him to Hollywood as a singer, song writer, and pianist. In Wild Symphony, he puts the music and songs he composed more than 30 years ago into a story that invites children to travel with Maestro Mouse and his musical friends who visit with a sequence of friends. You’ll meet a big blue whale and a speedy cheetah, tiny beetles and graceful swans. There’s a coded message in the book, too. The poems combined with the music tell a story and reveal a funny or interesting side of each animal’s personality. Also included are directions to download a free phone app which plays Brown’s compositions for each page as recorded by the Zagreb Symphony Orchestra. Go to YouTube for a taste of this amazing, fun book. This book is on my Christmas list for my grandchildren.


Picture and Board Books to Introduce Social Justice and Activism to Little Progressives

Woke Baby, by Mahogany Browne
“This lyrical and empowering book is both a celebration of what it means to be a baby and what it means to be woke. With bright playful art, Woke Baby is an anthem of hope in a world where the only limit to a skyscraper is more blue.” -Publisher’s Description. Board Book.

Antiracist Baby, by Ibram X. Kendi
Illustrations and rhyming text present nine steps Antiracist Baby can take to improve equity. Board Book.

Sometimes People March, by Tessa Allen
“Marching is something people do together when they want to resist injustice.” Spare prose teaches the necessity of rallying together. Allen describes multiple modes of engagement, reminding readers that they can make a difference not only through in-person gatherings, but also through making art and “by/ standing up/ or sitting down/ or taking a knee.” Ages 4-8.


For Older Readers

One Time, by Sharon Creech
Imaginative 11-year old Gina, her mysterious new neighbor, Antonio, and their classmates are inspired by an unusual young teacher to see who they are and envision who they are meant to become. Recommended grades 3-7.

Thank You Notes

You have made a difference in the life of a child. Thank you! Your recent gift ensures the children and youth we serve are connected with a permanent, loving family.

Like you, we believe every child deserves a family to call their own. Your support makes lifelong connections between children and families a reality. Since 1885, investors like you have made the work we do possible. We are grateful for your support, especially through a continued pandemic when we had to cancel six fundraising events.

With gratitude,
Suzan Huntington
President & CEO


Dear Friends,
Thank you so much for your generous donation of $400! The Domestic Violence Resource Center (DVRC) truly appreciates your commitment to supporting survivors of domestic violence in Washington County.

Since 1975, DVRC has been providing lifesaving services to survivors of domestic violence, but our work would not be possible without the help of people like you! We thank you for continuing to support our mission of educating, supporting, and empowering those affected by domestic violence after so many years.

Your gift is very important to us and we are grateful for your kindness!

With gratitude,
Rosemary (Rowie) Taylor
Executive Director

Pandemic Story: The View Through the Lens

Did you know Rick & Becky LeRoy flew to Hollywood a couple of years ago to celebrate Rick’s birthday on the Ellen show? They had connections that enabled them to secure tickets to the filming and were given VIP treatment as they were led right down front to enjoy the show.

So it’s no secret that Rick enjoys the whole video environment and, during this pandemic, he’s found himself on the other side of the camera. He’s part of a tech team recording livestream worship at St. Andrew on Sunday mornings. In many ways, the challenge of delivering a pleasing worship service to the congregation has been energizing for Rick.

“After getting some initial training on our switching software and hardware from Jennifer [Trom], I started watching YouTube videos to learn how other churches handle the technical side. In the ensuing weeks, I learned how to use the free and widely used software, OBS Studio, to add a countdown timer to our livestream and hopefully provide a smoother way to integrate prerecorded videos to our services. I hope to continue to add to our production knowledge-base and keep learning new things. It turns out you can teach an old dog new tricks!”

Rick covers video responsibilities, while his production partner, Paul Navarre, fills the audio role. They’ve been producing our worship services every other week.

Online Book Fair Pick-ups

Books purchased through St. Andrew’s Online Book Fair earlier this week can pick up their orders on Sunday, November 8, 2:00-4:00 pm at the church. Please come to the front entrance and wear a mask. Our new adult librarian Pam Farr will meet you inside the Narthex and give you your purchases.

If this time is inconvenient for you, please make alternative arrangements by contacting the church office via phone (503-646-0629) or e-mail.

Worship Connection Problems?

St. Andrew’s tech team is offering a new service on Sundays for anyone having difficulty connecting to worship. Between 8:00 am and 1:00 pm, you can simply call the church office at 503-646-0629 to get help from the pros.

Remember that Rebecca Fako Uecker also continues to offer technical help for church-related purposes. You can contact her via email.

Renewing Thanksgiving in a Pandemic

Have you talked with your loved ones yet about how you’re going to celebrate Thanksgiving, Advent, and Christmas? This year’s gatherings will no doubt be different than the ones we remember from years past.

Matia Brocker, for instance, is determined to visit her grandparents in Sunriver, but they are in that older, especially vulnerable group. So Matia and her family have decided to live in quarantine for 17 days prior to their trip. They’re making a disciplined commitment by living in isolation for an extended period in order to safely see beloved grandparents and enjoy a long-delayed visit.

In 2020, public health experts are recommending very limited travel, smaller gatherings, simpler meals, strict adherence to masks and physical distancing, and shorter gatherings overall. Frankly, they’d prefer that people forego traditional celebrations and gather virtually, perhaps sharing recipes beforehand and eating together remotely by Zoom on Thanksgiving Day.

Regardless how we approach this first holiday of the season, it will be good to pause and take time to remember the awesome gifts we can continue to number—especially since we’ve been lamenting several things we’ve had to give up during this pandemic. Despite all the challenges before us, we are blessed.

Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker
is on call Fridays & Saturdays.
office: 503-646-0629 ext. 201
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig
is on call Sundays & Mondays.
503-646-0629 ext. 211
pastorrobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

Children’s Sermon: The Snowberry

Editor’s Note: This is the second in our series of five Children’s Sermons introducing young people to Oregon’s native plants.

Good morning. My name is Carol, which means song of joy, and I’ll be talking to you today about the Snowberry plant. The Latin name for Snowberry is Symphoricarpos albus.

“Symphori” means bear together, and you can see how the snowberries hang together in a clump. “Carpos” means fruits, referring to the clustered fruits, and “albus” means white, without luster. The berries are a dull white, not shiny. The common name of this plant, Snowberry, also refers to the white fruits.

The plants bloom in the spring from mid-May to July with small white and pinkish flowers that attract hummingbirds, but these natives are mostly pollinated by bees.

When I did research for the Snowberry, I learned that the fruits of this plant are called drupes. I didn’t know that word, but it means that they have a fleshy fruit surrounding a large seed, like in a peach or a plum. Of course, Snowberry seeds aren’t that large because the berries are so small.

Symphoricarpos has about 15 different species, 12 of which are found in the United States, from southeast Alaska to southern California and all across the northern U.S. and Canadian provinces. Snowberries usually grow 3-9 feet tall and are sometimes known as Waxberry, White Coralberry, or White, Thin-leaved, or Few-flowered Snowberry.

You might wonder why there is so much fruit on the plant still, so late in the fall. Well, I grew this plant at my house in Northern Illinois for about 15 years. I planted them because they are native and they would produce berries for the birds. And I can tell you that the berries last through most of the winter into spring. The reason for this is that they have a kind of bitter taste, so it’s not the favorite berry for some of the animals that feed on it.

But the good thing is that the berries stay on the plant into spring so there is food all through the winter for the animals.

Common Snowberry has long been grown as an ornamental shrub. Winter is its most conspicuous season, when its white berries stand out against leafless branches. Its dainty pinkish flowers are also attractive in the spring.

Where can you find this plant? Snowberries are found along stream banks, in swampy thickets, and in moist clearings and open forests. St. Andrew has all of those environments in the Sanctuary of the Firs and the grounds around the church.

Snowberries tolerate poor soil and neglect. I can do that! One of the great things about growing this plant is that it does best in heavy clay soils. I have a lot of that where I live!

Who/what eats this plant? Answer: birds (robins and thrushes, grouse, sort of a brown chicken), deer, antelope, Bighorn sheep, and bears. My research tells me that “use by elk and moose varies.” I’m not sure what that means and don’t know how to ask Bullwinkle Moose the question! Snowberries are also important for providing shelter and food for small mammals.

Various indigenous peoples used the Snowberry for medicine. They created an infusion by soaking the plant in water to make an eyewash for sore eyes. They rubbed the berries on the skin to treat burns, rashes, and sores. They created a decoction of the roots and stems to treat urinary problems, like having trouble peeing. The same decoction treated people for tuberculosis and fevers associated with teething.

Some indigenous groups made brooms out of Snowberry branches, another group hollowed out the twigs to make pipe-stems, and people of one tribe ate one or two of the berries to settle the stomach after eating too much fatty food.

There is another kind of Symphoricarpos that is native in Nevada and California. Because of climate change and global warming, that means it is moving north into Oregon as a native plant. This kind is Symphoricarpos mollis, meaning creeping. It grows low to the ground.

I planted this variety about 2 years ago and the two plants looked really good last year, but one of them kind of disappeared this year. I thought at first it was because of the drought, but after a few weeks I found out the real answer.

I have a black and white cow-print kitty. She is very cute and lovable. She was adopted out of a storm sewer in southwestern Illinois, where she liked to sit with the kids waiting at the bus stop. They named her Maisy.

She likes to help me garden and follows me around doing yard work. She also likes to take dirt baths. You can see in the picture how dusty her black fur gets. Usually, she just takes her dust baths in a dusty area or if she needs a good scratch she does it on the concrete. But I caught her in the front yard giving herself a rubdown on the twigs of that dying Creeping Snowberry! Some of the twigs are still in the yard, but I had to put a white towel under them to take a picture!

How do you propagate Snowberries or get more of them? You can take cuttings of half-ripe wood in July or August or of mature wood in winter. Suckers may be divided in the dormant season. Plants re-sprout from rhizomes after a fire. Common Snowberry spreads by root suckers and is best given plenty of space to create a wild thicket.

Snowberry tolerates poor soil and neglect. I can do that, but I’ll need to put in a barrier for dirt-bath kitty! These native plants are great for controlling erosion on slopes, for restoration after forest fires, and for mine reclamation projects. They are also popular in rain gardens.

Carol Werner

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Marilyn Hanson (mother) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Mark Hanson
Family and friends of Jean Pacey (wife) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Ed Pacey
Family and friends of Robert Zahn (brother) Peace and God’s comfort at his death Anne Newell
Family and friends of Ellie Prink (aunt) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Carol Hogan
Family and friends of Carole Harmon Peace and God’s comfort at her death Pastor Robyn Hartwig
Jim Smith (brother-in-law) and his family Peace, comfort, and support as he is in hospice care Mary Smith
Margie Lee (wife) Strength, comfort, and healing Robert May
Bob Cornie Correct diagnosis and effective treatment Staff
Peter Kindem (uncle) Healing and recovery from lung transplant Megan Webber
Debbie (daughter’s friend) Healing and recovery from open heart surgery Joanne Zenger
Elaine May Healing and recovery from knee replacement surgery Staff
Our Nation Healing of deep divisions Staff
The American people Patience and calm in the aftermath of the election Staff
St. Andrew Council
Executive Committee
Staff
Wisdom and discernment Staff
Karen Klingelhafer,
Kyler Vogt,
and all seminarians;
India Jensen Kerr
and all theology students
Encouragement and support Staff
St. Andrew Foundation Blessings on their ministry Staff
Valby Lutheran Church (Ione, OR)
Zion Lutheran Church (La Grande, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Masjid as-Sabr (Portland, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

Wednesday Evening Meditation

Our midweek Prayer Services continue into the fall on Wednesday nights via Zoom. The service will focus on our role in creation, with music, prayer, meditations, and scripture.

     6:30 pm:  Informal Gathering Time
     7:00 pm:  Wednesday Evening Prayer
     7:30 pm:  Centering Prayer

Join us for any or all of these events. The connection link is sent out Wednesday afternoons, so please watch for it.

Worship Plan

Looking ahead to the coming seasons of the church, the Worship Planning Committee is announcing that current worship practices will continue through Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany.

To review, St. Andrew offers livestream worship via YouTube at 8:30 am on Sundays, with worship broadcast via Zoom at 11:00 am. Both services include the opportunity to share in remote Communion. Adult Education classes and gatherings for children, Confirmation students, and high school youth are all offered via Zoom, as is Wednesday Evening Prayer.

People without internet connection are able to listen to a recording of Sunday worship by calling 503-643-9416. Please see “Connecting to Worship at St. Andrew” for details.

Highlights for the Week

Check the church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, November 8, Twenty-third Sunday of Pentecost

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  The Book of Job Zoom
11:00 am Online Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Monday, November 9

7:00 pm Men’s Book Club (Host, Ted Miller Zoom

Tuesday, November 10

9:00 am Facility Management Team Meeting Zoom
10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
1:30 pm Service Committee Zoom
6:00 pm HR Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Finance Meeting Zoom

Wednesday, November 11 – Veterans Day, Office Closed; Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

6:00 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm High School Youth Game Night Zoom
7:00 pm Wednesday Evening Prayer Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer Zoom

Thursday, November 12

10:00 am Virtual Staff Meeting Zoom

Friday, November 13

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd

Saturday, November 14

1:00 pm Memorial Service for Marilyn Hanson followed by virtual reception Zoom

Sunday, November 15, Twenty-fourth Sunday of Pentecost

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School Kickoff (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  The Book of Job Zoom
11:00 am Online Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give: Thank you for supporting our ministries!




November 1, 2020

Time for a Change

It’s that time again—the weekend many of us dread, when we turn our clocks back and darkness clamps down on our day even earlier. The good news is that most of us are able to sleep in until the sun rises. Remember to turn your clocks back one hour before you go to bed Saturday, October 31, and enjoy one more hour of rest this weekend.

Adult Ed: Job’s Response to Misery

Join Steve Christiansen this Sunday, November 1, at 10:00 am when he resumes his adult education course on the book of Job via Zoom. An incorrect translation has led us to believe that Job was a patient man. Not so, Christiansen explains, but he was persistent and he somehow kept going in spite of the odds. Job’s story is relevant for our time in that it raises many questions about the suffering of the innocent. Please note that the Zoom link to connect to this class is included in your Friday e-mail from St. Andrew.

Not yet receiving emails from St. Andrew? Click on the blue button to join the email list!

EMO Voter’s Guide

If you’ve not yet turned in your ballot yet, it’s time to get busy! Remember that all ballots cast in Oregon are due in drop boxes or at the County Clerk’s office no later than 8:00 pm on Tuesday, November 3. If you need some background information on ballot issues Oregon voters are being asked to approve or reject, Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon (EMO) has produced a guide for people of faith to consider when casting their ballots: https://emoregon.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/EMO_Voters_Guide_Fall2020.pdf

Troop 618 Greenery Sales

Despite pandemic separation, St. Andrew’s BSA Scout Troop 618, 5618, and Crew 618 are again selling Christmas greenery for your holiday decorations. Wreaths, garlands, and centerpieces are available, with proceeds going to benefit the Scouts. If you’re interested and would like to see a digital brochure with images and prices, act now by contacting Scout volunteer Amy Harker. All orders are due to her by Monday, November 2. Greenery orders will be delivered to your home the weekend of November 21 and 22.

Thanksgiving is Coming!

The Service Committee is once again sponsoring Thanksgiving meals for Community Action families and we need your help. Community Action works with families on parenting, financial stability, housing, and education. These are families that really need help.

We will not be able to see those food boxes filling the Narthex this year due to COVID-19. Instead, we will be using money donated to Thanksgiving Food Box fund to purchase Winco gift cards for these families.

Last year we were able to donate 75 food boxes, which had a value of $50 each, to families in need. We would like to achieve this goal again this year; that will require $3,750 in donations. If you wish to give online, select designated giving, Thanksgiving Boxes—or you can send a check made out to St. Andrew with Thanksgiving Food Drive in the memo line.

This is a wonderful way to live out our faith, as well as giving a needy family the chance to celebrate Thanksgiving with a delicious meal. Please consider helping with a donation of any amount this year. Our deadline for donation is November 15 to give us time to purchase gift cards and get them to these families. Please email or call LuAnn Staul at 503-314-6321, or email or call Linda McDowall at 503-649-5091 with questions.

Dismantling Racism in Our Institutions

Join some members of our “Reckoning with Racism” team this Sunday at 12:30 pm in the worship Zoom room as we watch the Oregon Experience film titled “Oregon’s Black Pioneers” or watch it on your own at https://tinyurl.com/OregonBlackPioneers. Then learn more at Oregon Black Pioneers.

Long before Oregon became a state, black people were in the Far West, some brought as slaves but many others arriving as freemen looking for a new life. They opened boarding houses and stores, worked farms and mined for gold. But white settlers passed discriminatory laws to keep African Americans out or force them to leave.

Pastor Robyn

Help with Rent, Utilities, and Childcare

The director of Family Promise has informed its host coordinators that it has funds available for people needing help paying for childcare, rent, or utilities during this time of extraordinary need. People needing assistance are welcome to call Family Promise at 971-217-8949. Please be aware that these funds need to be used by the end of this calendar year.

PLU Confirmation Scholarship

Last year Pacific Lutheran University expanded its PLU Confirmation Scholarship nationwide so that any student who has been confirmed in an ELCA congregation can receive the $1,500 per year Confirmation Scholarship. This award stacks on top of other PLU scholarships, including those for academic or artistic achievements.

The Confirmation Scholarship form must be completed and submitted by a church official (pastor, youth leader, etc.) before the student’s high school graduation. PLU is a private liberal arts Lutheran university in Parkland, WA, that was founded by Norwegian Lutheran immigrants in 1890.

Preparing for Next Sunday

November 8, 2020

Reading: Amos 5:18-24
Gospel: Matthew 25:1-13

Men’s Book Club Reading List Update

Please note this update for the Men’s Book Club: Gary Grafwallner requests that members of the group please read The Moth Presents All These Wonders: True Stories About Facing the Unknown, edited by Catherine Burns instead of his original selection for January 2021 (The Tattoist of Auschwitz). A reviewer for the Daily Mail says, “All These Wonders is a compelling read, by turns uplifting, heartbreaking, and ultimately redemptive. If there is a real hero of the book, it is surely the human spirit, which, time and again, transcends whatever life throws at it.”

Date Book Host
November 9 Strip Tease, by Carl Hiassen  Ted Miller
December 14 Too Much and Never Enough, by Mary Trump Tim Holte
January 11  The Moth Presents All These Wonders: True Stories About Facing the Unknown, edited by Catherin Burns Gary Grafwallner
February 8  News of the World, by Paule0e Jiles  Dan Fako
March 8  Homegoing, by Yaa Gyasi  Larry Bliesner

The Men’s Book Club meets on the second Monday of the month via Zoom. If you’d like more information about the group, please contact Gary Grafwallner. To receive the Zoom link for each meeting, please contact the respective host.

Collins Summit: Shalom in Divided Times

What does shalom and unity look like in 2020, when racial unrest, political tensions, and COVID-19 have impacted nearly every aspect of our lives? This year at its Collins Summit, Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon is asking
how we bring our whole selves to the table and stay engaged in light of our differences, not in spite of them.

The Summit will include a lecture from Lisa Sharon Harper, founder and president of FreedomRoad.us and one of today’s leading voices on the topics of poverty, racial and gender justice, and transformational civic engagement.

Register now for the virtual event to be held Wednesday, November 18.

St. Andrew’s Pandemic Protocols

  1. Call or email ahead to arrange building access (even if you have a key).
  2. Sign in at the table in the Narthex.
  3. Wash your hands or use the provided hand sanitzer after signing in.
  4. Wear a mask the entire time you are in the building.

With a third wave of infections sweeping the country, with the advent of flu season and cold temperatures that keep people inside, and with loving care for all members of our community so wearied by this pandemic, it’s more important now than ever to do all we can to protect ourselves and keep each other safe. Stay the course. Maintain the discipline that’s been effective so far.

Please note that the church building remains locked. Even if you have a key, we ask that you call or e-mail the church office to arrange access in advance of coming to St. Andrew. This allows us to monitor occupancy and prevent people from inadvertently interfering with others who need to come to the building to do their work. Please don’t assume you will be the only person inside. Staff continue to adjust their hours to prevent the spread of infection, while providing for online worship means that people are working in the building much of Saturday and Sunday.

When you do visit the building, we ask you to follow the protocols. Put on a mask before you even open the door, sign in at the round table in the Narthex, indicating what rooms you plan to visit, wash your hands, keep your mask on (covering both your mouth and nose) the entire time you’re inside, and remember to sign out at the time you leave. Use your own pen at the sign-in register or take a clean one from the left receptacle and deposit it in the used cup on the right.

We want you to have access to our libraries, to your mailboxes, and to the sacristy to prepare for worship. Individual Nifty Notters have worked in Fellowship Hall to finish projects. But our ministry groups are meeting online because it is so much safer. Be vigilant. Stay well! When we’re able to reopen, we want to welcome each and every one of you back inside the St. Andrew building!

Children’s Sermon: The Oregon White Oak

Editor’s Note: Each week for the next five weeks, you’ll see the previous Sunday’s Children’s Sermon reprinted in Weekly News.

Good morning, boys and girls. My name is Eric Luttrell. Today I will be offering the first of five children’s sermons presented by our Community Carbon yard science team about some special native plants. Native plants are special. They developed in our regional environment, with plants and animals evolving together to develop mutually beneficial relationships. Insects, birds, and mammals evolved interacting with a very large variety of plants, eating those plants and helping those plants with pollination and see dispersal.

This silhouette of the Oregon White Oak is recognizable when we look around the Willamette Valley. You might even recognize some of these trees from your own neighborhood.

It’s easy to see why these majestic, big trees are called canopy trees when they grow up and become adults.

My sermon today is about our native Oregon Oak trees. I am standing here beside Faith, one of two Oregon Oak trees that we recently planted. We are calling the second oak tree Hope. These trees will be the large canopy trees of our Reformation Earth Garden. As they mature, these canopy trees will shade large areas of understory trees and shrubs. We are lucky that we have this large area around our church to plant oaks, as they would become too big for planting in the yards around your house.

To give you an idea about how big Oregon Oak trees can get, this is a photo of an Oregon Oak tree in LuAnn Staul’s yard, so large that not all of it fits in the photo. That’s me standing next to it. This tree is five feet in diameter, about 50 feet tall, and about 300 years old. 300 years ago, when this tree was a sapling like Faith, our United States was just a small colony of the United Kingdom, consisting of 13 sub-colonies located right along the eastern shore of North America. At that time, there would have been no white Europeans in Oregon for at least 50 more years, which was also the time that we declared independence from that United Kingdom.

Oaks of this size and age will be the direct ancestors of many generations of oak trees in an oak grove of many acres. I call them Grandparent Trees. The trees descending from the grandparent trees depended upon someone planting their seeds — what we call acorns. Who does the planting of those acorns? Squirrels. Squirrels like to dig holes and bury acorns for food for next winter. And, amazingly, they remember where they buried those acorns. They remember most of them. If they forget, those acorns will sprout and grow into new oak trees. This means that the oaks and squirrels have a symbiotic relationship—a relationship of mutual benefit. The oaks feed the squirrels and the squirrels plant the oak seeds.

A scrub jay and his acorns.

Now why, specifically are we planting Oregon Oaks? Scientists have discovered that oaks in general are the most important trees upon which caterpillars feed. Caterpillars are the larval stages of butterflies and other insects that feed on tree leaves. And millions and millions and millions of caterpillars are collected every spring by adult songbirds to feed their baby chicks. And the best oak trees for hosting caterpillars are native oak trees, and Oregon Oak is our native oak tree.

While our newly planted Faith and Hope look like tall sticks now, when the young children in our church are in high school, they will be 25 to 35 feet tall, as tall as the back side of the sanctuary. Now it will take some time for our two small oak trees to grow large enough to supply lots and lots of caterpillars for baby birds. While we are waiting, the next best trees for caterpillars are native willow trees. And, lucky for us, we have several hundred native willows in the wetland on our property.

Besides caterpillars to feed baby birds, what else do oaks provide for wildlife? Acorns. All kinds of animals eat acorns—squirrels, chipmunks, birds, and deer.

Oregon White Oak leaves and acorns.

In Oregon and California, the indigenous people (Indians) ate lots of acorns as a nutritious source of fats and carbohydrates. They would leach out the bitter tannins in the acorns, grind them into flour, and make a kind of bread. Since Oregon Oaks were the most common tree in the Willamette Valley (with millions of trees), and since the long-lived oaks had lots of acorns (millions and millions of acorns), acorns were an important native food source along with fish, meat, berries, and mushrooms.

Faith and Hope are the first of many trees, shrubs, flowers, and grasses that we will plant in this area around me just outside our back patio. We intend to call this area our Reformation Earth Garden. With time, this garden will be the home of more than 40 different varieties of native plants. And because most of these 40 new varieties are different from the many, many varieties of native plants currently found in our wetland and forest, we are greatly expanding the diversity of our local ecosystem.

We will be planting these native plants as part of our responsibility to improve our environment for all living creatures. With time, we hope that this garden will become part of what Douglas Tallamy in his book Nature’s Best Hope calls America’s Homegrown National Park, with a variety of native plants in every yard.

Eric Luttrell

Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker
is on call Fridays & Saturdays.
office: 503-646-0629 ext. 201
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

Pastor Robyn Hartwig
is on call Sundays & Mondays.
503-646-0629 ext. 211
pastorrobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

St. Andrew’s Online Book Fair

Seize these days, November 3-7, and support one of St. Andrew’s treasures—our libraries. For five days this coming week, you can shop online at Annie Bloom’s Books, indicate your purchases should benefit St. Andrew, and the bookstore will return 20 percent of the proceeds to our new library leadership team of Pam Farr and Barbara Gutzler so they can purchase new titles for our children’s and adult collections.

You can participate even without an internet connection. Simply call Annie Bloom’s at 503-246-0053 and tell the clerk to credit your purchase to St. Andrew.

If you’re hungry for some satisfying reading over the upcoming months, but don’t know where to start, check out Mary Nell Mahler’s list of some suggested titles below. You’ll see a copy of the book cover on Annie Bloom’s website and you can click on that to read more about the book.

Please remember that you need not limit your shopping to this list, however; the bookstore will use the total amount of your purchase to figure the 20 percent credit it returns to St. Andrew.

So grab a warm beverage and snuggle in to do some shopping at https://www.annieblooms.com/st-andrews-book-fair.

Suggested Titles for Your Consideration:

YA All of Us with Wings, by Michelle Ruiz Keil
F All This Could be Yours, by Jami Attenberg
F American Dirt, by Jeanine Cummins
NF America’s Religious Wars, by Kathleen M. Sands
SS,F And I Do Not Forgive You, by Amber Sparks
H And Then You Die of Dysentery, by Lauren Reeves
NF The Art of Ramona Quimby, by Anna Katz
P,MG The Beadworkers, by Beth Piatote
F The Beekeeper of Aleppo, by Christy Lefteri
CPB A Big Bed for Little Snow, by Grace Lin
F,H The Big Finish, by Brooke Fossey
F Big Summer, by Jennifer Weiner
CPB Birdsong, by Julie Flett
CPB The Birth of Jesus: A Christmas Pop-Up, by Agostino Traini
CPB Bitty Brown Babe, by Deborah LeFalle & Keisha Morris
F The Boy from the Woods, by Harlan Coben
F Chosen Ones, by Veronica Roth
F The City We Became, by N.K. Jemisin
C Countdown to Christmas, by Mary Manz Simon
C Crossing on Time, by David Macaulay
NF The Dance of the Dissident Daughter, by Sue Monk Kidd
F Disappearing Earth, by Julia Phillips
C Double Bass Blues, by Andrea Loney
F Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead, by Olga Tokarczuk
F The Dutch House, by Ann Patchett
F Erasing Memory: A MacNeice Mystery, by Scott Thornley
F Faithful Place, by Tana French
F The Fifth Season, by N.K. Jemisin
C,F Here in the Real World, by Sara Pennypacker
Bio His Truth Is Marching On: John Lewis and the Power of Hope, by Jon Meacham
NF Keys to Bonhoeffer’s Haus, by Laura Fabrycky
CPB Little Mole Finds Hope, by Glenys Nellist
F Long Bright River, by Liz Moore
CPB Love Is…, by Diane Adams
F The Mirror and the Light, by Hilary Mantel
C The Night of His Birth, by Katherine Paterson
F The Night Watchman, by Louise Erdrich
F On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, by Ocean Vuong
NF Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West, by David McCullough
F Red at the Bone, by Jacqueline Woodson
F Redhead by the Side of the Road, by Anne Tyler
F Royal Holiday, by Jasmine Guillory
NF Save Me the Plums: My Gourmet Memoir, by Ruth Reichl
CPB The Star in the Christmas Play, by Lynne Marie
CPB Summer Song, by Kevin Henkes
CPB This Is the Church, by Sarah Raymond Cunningham
F A Time for Mercy, by John Grisham
NF Trees in Trouble: Wildfires, Infestations, and Climate Change, by Daniel Mathews
NF When the Heart Waits, by Sue Monk Kidd
CPB Where the Best Stories Hide, by Roman Yasiejko
F With the Fire on High, by Elizabeth Acevedo
C,NF The World of the Old Testament: A Curious Kid’s Guide to the Bible’s Most Ancient Stories, by Marc Olson

Key:
Bio: Biography
C: Children’s Book
CPB: Children’s Picture Book
F: Fic8on
H: Humor
NF: Nonfic8on
P,MG: Poetry, Mixed Genre
SS: Short Stories
YA: Young Adult

In Need of Prayers…

Family and friends of Patty Werner (sister-in-law) Peace and God’s comfort at her death Susan Werner Reiser
Carole Harmon and her family Peace, comfort, and support as she is in hospice care Pastor Robyn Hartwig
Jim Smith (brother-in-law) and his family Peace, comfort, and support as Jim is in hospice care Mary Smith
Margie Lee (wife) Strength, comfort, and healing Robert May
Liz Andersen Correct diaggnosis, effective treatment, and healing Liz Andersen
James & Tammy Vogt, Audrey Vogt and Brenna Vogt (parents & sisters) Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Kyler Vogt
Peter Kindem (uncle) Healing and recovery from lung transplant Megan Webber
Debbie (daughter’s friend) Healing and recovery from open heart surgery Joanne Zenger
Jane Quigg (sister) Healing and recovery from hip replacement Eric & Jan Luttrell
Ellie Prink (aunt) Healing and recovery for multiple health issues Carol Hogan
Elaine May Healing and recovery from knee replacement surgery Staff
Our nation Integrity of the election Staff
The American people Patience, calm, and safety as we await election results Staff
Bishop Laurie Larson Caesar
Oregon Synod and Staff
Strength and wisdom Staff
Refugees and Immigrants Acceptance, safety, and just treatment Staff
Military Personnel, especially
Justina Hailey Hope Brocker,
Evan Dahlquist,
Dawson Dethlefs,
Neil Fiegenbaum, and
Jerami Reyna
Courage and protection Staff
Grace Lutheran Church (Enterprise, OR)
Nativity Lutheran Church (Bend, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff
Beit Haverim (Lake Oswego, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

If you know someone in need of prayers, please contact the church office by phone at 503-646-0629 or email office@standrewlutheran.com Tuesday-Friday, prayerchain@standrewlutheran.com Saturday-Monday.

Wednesday Evening Meditation

Our midweek Prayer Services continue into the fall on Wednesday nights via Zoom. The service will focus on our role in creation, with music, prayer, meditations, and scripture.

     6:30 pm:  Informal Gathering Time
     7:00 pm:  Wednesday Evening Prayer
     7:30 pm:  Centering Prayer

Join us for any or all of these events. The connection link is sent out Wednesday afternoons, so please watch for it.

Worship Plan

Looking ahead to the coming seasons of the church, the Worship Planning Committee is announcing that current worship practices will continue through Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany.

To review, St. Andrew offers livestream worship via YouTube at 8:30 am on Sundays, with worship broadcast via Zoom at 11:00 am. Both services include the opportunity to share in remote Communion. Adult Education classes and gatherings for children, Confirmation students, and high school youth are all offered via Zoom, as is Wednesday Evening Prayer.

People without internet connection are able to listen to a recording of Sunday worship by calling 503-643-9416. Please see “Connecting to Worship at St. Andrew” for details.

Highlights for the Week

Check the church calendar for the most up-to-date information.

Sunday, November 1, All Saints Sunday

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  The Misery of Job Zoom
11:00 am Online Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
12:30 pm Viewing of “Oregon’s Black Pioneers” (with Reckoning with Racism chort) Zoom

Tuesday, November 3

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd
10::00 am Worship Planners Meeting Zoom

Wednesday, November 4 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

12:30 pm Bonhoeffer Seminar Zoom
6:00 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm High School Youth Game Night Zoom
7:00 pm Wednesday Evening Prayer Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer Zoom

Thursday, November 5

12:00 pm Team Ministry Meeting Zoom
7:00 pm Executive Committee Meeting Zoom 

Friday, November 6

10:00 am T’ai Chi former Bales Thriftway on Cornell Rd

Sunday, November 8, Twenty-third Sunday after Pentecost

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  The Political Responsibility of the Church Zoom
11:00 am Online Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

Connecting to Worship

Ways to Give




October 25, 2020

Learn about the news of the week here: read the articles below or download the PDF.

We hope you find a way to get connected!

Weekly News (pdf)Download

 

EMO Voter’s Guide & Forum

Oregon voters will be asked to say yay or nay to four measures on their ballots in the coming days. Do you know what the issues are or how you will respond? Once again, Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon (EMO) has produced a guide for people of faith to consider when casting their ballots.

 

Blessing Our Reformation Earth Garden

Reformation Sunday, October 25, 2020, at 1:00 pm
This Sunday afternoon the congregation is invited to return to the church for a special outdoor event: the blessing of our St. Andrew Reformation Earth Garden. We’ll all wear masks, maintain a safe distance, celebrate the planting of Faith and Hope, and learn about our Community Carbon Science Team’s ongoing efforts to be good stewards of this Earth. Join us north of the sanctuary on the patio, parking lot, or in the garden itself. The service will be short, but bring a chair if you think you will need one.

Some years ago, we mourned the loss of the majestic Douglas-fir that once centered this space, but we now marvel at another native tree, the Reformation red cedar, that’s growing up toward the sky in its place. Good soil nurtures native plants that feed birds and other wildlife—and, ultimately, us. It’s a beautiful system.

 

Wednesday Evening Meditation

During our midweek Prayer Services this Wednesday, October 28, Judy Scholz will share a meditation on “Love in COVID Time.” As Judy explains, COVID has given us a new measurement of time where we take things slower, but safer. We bear the risks we have to, but with care.

Wednesday Evening Prayer Services via Zoom include music, prayer, meditation, and scripture. You can find the bulletin on the Preparing for Worship page.

6:30 pm: Informal Gathering Time
7:00 pm: Wednesday Evening Prayer
7:30 pm: Centering Prayer

Join us for any or all of these events. The Zoom connection link is sent out Wednesday afternoons, so please watch your inbox for it.

 

Giving

The church I grew up in required every member give 10 percent of their gross income to the church. If you paid less than 10 percent, you were not allowed to do certain things, and we were told that blessings from God were being withheld.

At times in my life, my budget would not really allow for 10 percent of my gross income to go to the church. I always felt shame about giving 3 or 4 percent, so I stopped giving at all. Then I stopped talking to church leaders about it, and I eventually stopped going to church.

I didn’t want my spiritual experience for the week to feel like I was letting God down. So instead of going to church on Sundays, I started going for hikes. I felt peace and tranquility that made me feel so much better than the judgment I felt at church. And for several years, that was my church.

I know that God needs our help. We have a beautiful place of worship and, without help from the members, we would no longer have this beautiful space.

It’s easy to think about all of the wonderful things we receive from coming to this church, without thinking about the boring, behind-thescenes things that need to happen to make sure we are able to enjoy the wonderful things.

We think about the way we feel when we see our friends, the smile and hug we get from the pastors, the peace and reverence we feel as we take communion. And how often do we think about the mortgage being paid, the grounds being maintained, purchasing materials for Sunday School activities, deep cleaning the building? Well, we might think about the cleaning of the building a little more now due to the coronavirus.

We tend to focus on the things we receive more than the things we are helping to build. And we should all realize that by giving freely, we are helping to build the kingdom of God. This is not a membership fee; it is not a tax. We are giving freely so that we can be a part of the building up of His kingdom. And because we are doing that, future generations will have a beautiful place to worship. Children will have access to more opportunities to learn and to grow in faith.

If we look at our offering as an obligation, that is what it will be. But if we understand that our gifts are used by the church to make sure that we all can continue to receive the type of spiritual experience we desire, we will begin to enjoy it. We will look for additional ways to give and we will begin to make it part of our regular budget.

Andy Roberts

Join Andy Roberts for his adult education forum on Budgeting for Giving at 10:00 am on Stewardship Sunday, October 25. Connect via Zoom. Need the link? Join the email list by clicking on the blue button:

 

2020 Beaverton Virtual Art Show

Artistic talent abounds among us! This month, you can go online to see the work of some 350 artists, including St. Andrew’s own Ken Reiner, who were selected to participate in Beaverton’s 2020 Virtual Art Show. Browse the entire collection or search by artist name. The art is available for purchase, too, so if you see something you really like you can follow up with the artist.

 

Table Talk: White Supremacy

Gathered around the table in his home, Martin Luther talked freely and openly with his colleagues and students about matters of faith, theology, and varied aspects of daily life. In an effort to cultivate this kind of spirited discussion, we have a tradition at St. Andrew of gathering for Table Talks.

Though we cannot gather in person, Pastor Brocker invites you to participate in the next Table Talk via Zoom on Thursday, October 29, 7:00-8:00 pm.

At the first Presidential Debate on Tuesday, September 29, President Trump could not bring himself to clearly and unambiguously denounce White supremacy. In the essay “White Supremacy Is a Script We’re Given at Birth,” Reggie Williams, Associate Professor of Christian Ethics at McCormick Theological Seminary, observes “how prevalent and persistent White supremacy is in this country.” Williams is a member of the Board of the International Bonhoeffer Society—English Language Section. He has written a book entitled Bonhoeffer’s Black Jesus: Harlem Renaissance Theology and an Ethic of Resistance. According to Williams, White supremacy is not simply a problem for a small minority of violent young men; “it’s written in our flesh and rehearsed throughout history.” As a Black man Williams himself has experienced some of the consequences of the script of White supremacy.

In this Table Talk we will ask some very basic questions: What is White supremacy? How have we seen White supremacy manifested in our lives? Why is White supremacy so prevalent and persistent? To prepare for this Table Talk, you are encouraged to read Reggie Williams essay mentioned above.

 

Preparing for Next Sunday

November 1, 2020

Reading: Revelations 7:9-17

Gospel: Matthew 5:1-12

 

Thanksgiving Is Coming, Thanksgiving Is Coming!

The Service Committee is once again sponsoring Thanksgiving meals for Community Action families and we need your help. Community Action works with families on parenting, financial stability, housing, and education. These are families that really need help.

We will not be able to see those food boxes filling the Narthex this year due to COVID-19. Instead, we will be using money donated to Thanksgiving Food Box fund to purchase Winco gift cards for these families.

Last year we were able to donate 75 food boxes, which had a value of $50 each, to families in need. We would like to achieve this goal again this year; that will require $3,750 in donations. If you wish to give online, in the “Give to” drop-down boxes, select “3-Designated” in the first box and “Thanksgiving Boxes” in the second box. Or you can send a check made out to St. Andrew with “Thanksgiving Food Drive” in the memo line.

This is a wonderful way to live out our faith, as well as giving a needy family the chance to celebrate Thanksgiving with a delicious meal. Please consider helping with a donation of any amount this year. Our deadline for donation is November 15 to give us time to purchase gift cards and get them to these families.

Contact LuAnn Staul at 503-314-6321 or
Linda McDowall at 503-649-5091 with questions.

 

Dismantling Racism in Our Institutions

The 16 members of St. Andrew’s “Reckoning with Racism” cohort gathered this week to consider questions of how the past three generations of our families and congregation came to own particular land and the various kinds of value those lands hold. Kristin Sacks recommended a book she is reading, How We Go Home, Voices from Indigenous North America, edited by Sara Sinclair. She also recommends Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer, which is a beautifully written book about plants through the eyes of Native American traditions and Western science.

Pastor Robyn

 

Habitat for Humanity Fundraiser

Help Habitat provide decent housing for low-income, hardworking families.

On Tuesday, October 27, at 8:00 am, Habitat for Humanity will host its annual Build a Home, Frame a Future fundraiser. We’ll gather virtually on YouTube to celebrate Habitat homeowners and raise funds to build and repair homes for families in Washington County. You’ll have the opportunity to hear from some of the families that have been impacted by having a Habitat home.

If you have questions or would like connection information to access the gathering, please contact Dan Fako by email or phone at 503-626-3414.

 

Collins Summit: Shalom in Divided Times

What does shalom and unity look like in 2020, when racial unrest, political tensions, and COVID-19 have impacted nearly every aspect of our lives? This year at its Collins Summit, Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon is asking how we bring our whole selves to the table and stay engaged in light of our differences, not in spite of them.

The Summit will include a lecture from Lisa Sharon Harper, founder and president of FreedomRoad.us and one of today’s leading voices on the topics of poverty, racial and gender justice, and transformational civic engagement.

Register now for the virtual event to be held Wednesday, November 18.

 

Pastoral Care

Pastor Mark Brocker
is on call Fridays & Saturdays.
office: 503-646-0629 ext. 201
cell: 503-502-8762
brockerms@standrewlutheran.com

 

Pastor Robyn Hartwig
is on call Sundays & Mondays.
503-646-0629 ext. 211
pastorrobyn@standrewlutheran.com

Both pastors are on call Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

 

Creating Our Homegrown National Park

We are fortunate to live in an area that has many acres of parks with forests and native species. So why do we also need to be adding native plants to attract pollinators, insects, birds, and wildlife to our own landscapes?

In his book, Nature’s Best Hope, author and wildlife ecologist Douglas Tallamy tells us that conservation that is confined to parks will not preserve species in the long run, because these areas are too small and too separated from one another. Restoring habitat where we live, work, and worship, on the other hand, can serve to build biological corridors that connect preserved habitat fragments with one another. Creating biological corridors will enlarge the populations of plants and animals within protected habitat and enable them to weather normal population fluctuations indefinitely.

Tallamy postulates that if each us converted half of our lawns to productive native plant communities that it would provide more natural habitat than what exists in more than 12 of our national parks, including Yellowstone, Grand Teton, Grand Canyon, Mt. Rainier, North Cascades, and Olympic. By working together, we could create 20 million acres of a Homegrown National Park. This park wouldn’t be confined to one location, but it would permeate communities across the country, helping to preserve lives and ecosystems in all bioregions and all biomes.

At St. Andrew we are well on our way to contributing to a Homegrown National Park with the plantings of several thousand native plant species in our wetland and forest, as well as the very recent plantings of two Oregon white oaks. Join us as we gather to bless our new Reformation Earth Garden at 1:00 pm on Sunday, October 25, and advance our efforts to build a Homegrown National Park.

LuAnn Staul

 

Troop 618 Greenery Sales

Despite pandemic separation, St. Andrew’s Scout Troop 618, 5618, and Crew 618 are again selling Christmas greenery for your holiday decorations. Wreaths, garlands, and centerpieces are available, with proceeds going to benefit the BSA Scouts.

If you’re interested and would like to see a digital brochure with images and prices, act now by contacting Scout volunteer Amy Harker. All orders are due by Monday, November 2. Greenery orders will be delivered to your
home the weekend of November 21 and 22.

 

Remember these dates:

November 3-7, 2020
for St. Andrew’s Online Book Fair

You’ll be able to shop online at https://www.annieblooms.com/st-andrews-book-fair
with 20% of sales proceeds coming back to benefit our libraries.

 

Online Book Fair

Support one of St. Andrew’s treasures—our libraries. This November 3-7, you can shop online at Annie Bloom’s Books, indicate your purchases should benefit St. Andrew, and the bookstore will return 20 percent of the proceeds to our new library leadership team of Pam Farr and Barbara Gutzler in order to purchase new titles for our children’s and adult collections. You can participate even without an Internet connection. Simply call Annie Bloom’s at 503-246-0053 and tell the clerk to credit your purchase to St. Andrew.

If you’re hungry for some good reading over the upcoming months, but don’t know where to start, check out Mary Nell Mahler’s list of some suggested titles below. Please remember that you need not limit your shopping to this list:

Suggested Titles for Your Consideration:

YA All of Us with Wings, by Michelle Ruiz Keil Faithful Place
F All This Could be Yours, by Jami Attenberg Fifth Season
F American Dirt, by Jeanine Cummins Here in the Real World
NF America’s Religious Wars, by Kathleen M. Sands His Truth Is Marching On: John Lewis and the Power
SS And I Do Not Forgive You, by Amber Sparks Keys to Bonhoeffer
H And Then You Die of Dysentery, by Lauren Reeves Little Mole Finds Hope
NF The Art of Ramona Quimby, by Anna Katz Long Bright River
P, MG The Beadworkers, by Beth Piatote Love Is…
F The Beekeeper of Aleppo, by Christy Lefteri Mirror and the Light
CPB A Big Bed for Little Snow, by Grace Lin Night of His Birth
F,H The Big Finish, by Brooke Fossey Night Watchman
F Big Summer, by Jennifer Weiner On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous
CPB Birdsong, by Julie Flett Pioneers: The Heroic Story
CPB The Birth of Jesus: A Christmas Pop-Up, by Agostino Traini Red at the Bone
C Bitty Brown Babe, by Deborah LeFalle & Keisha Morris Redhead by the Side of the Road
F The Boy from the Woods, by Harlan Coben Royal Holiday
F Chosen Ones, by Veronica Roth Save Me the Plums
F The City We Became, by N.K. Jemisin Star in the Christmas Play
C Countdown to Christmas, by Mary Manz Simon Summer Song
C Crossing on Time, by David Macaulay This Is the Church
NF The Dance of the Dissident Daughter, by Sue Monk Kidd Time for Mercy
F Disappearing Earth, by Julia Phillips Trees in Trouble: Wildfires
C Double Bass Blues, by Andrea Loney When He Heart Waits
F Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead, by Olga Tokarczuk Where the Best Stories Hide
F The Dutch House, by Ann Patchett With the Fire on High
F Erasing Memory: A MacNeice Mystery, by Scott Thornley World of the Old Testament
C: Children’s Book
CPB: Children’s Picture Book
F: Fic#on
H: Humor
NF: Nonfic#on
P,MG: Poetry, Mixed Genre
SS: Short Stories
YA: Young Adult

Shop online here! https://www.annieblooms.com/st-andrews-book-fair

 

November Birthdays

Logan Uecker  November 1
Ronald Olshausen November 1
Ted Miller  November 1
Dan Flood  November 2
Jennifer Hooson  November 2
AJ Uecker  November 4
Jill Folkestad  November 4
LeAnn Haslett  November 4
Debi Gustafson  November 6
Nora Duggan  November 6
Blaine Covert  November 7
Joani Wardwell  November 7
Sylvia Lei  November 7
Sara Hays  November 9
Allison Katsufrakis  November 10
Emily Moore November 12
Lydia Ragan  November 13
Noelle Mehlhorn  November 13
Benjamin Matsuo  November 14
Rebecca Uecker  November 14
Marley Myers  November 15
Mary Brown  November 15
Melissa Allen  November 15
Tandy Brooks  November 15
Mary Carroll  November 16
Carol Kreger  November 18
Gretchen Bancroft  November 18
Jack Scholz  November 19
Sue Cahlander  November 20
Carol Hogan  November 21
Marlene Maxwell  November 22
Nils Ackman  November 22
Tiffany Lo  November 23
Jim Aageson  November 24
Shelley Jelineo  November 25
Susan Kintner November 27
Jack Dunlap  November 28
Dee Piscitelli  November 29
Steve Christiansen  November 29
Gordon Teifel  November 30

 

In Need of Prayers…

 

Family and friends of Patty Werner (sister-in-law) Peace and God’s comfort at her death   Susan Werner Reiser
Family and friends of Diana Heidinger (sister-in-law) Peace and God’s comfort at his death Judy Heidinger
Jim Smith (brother-in-law) and his family Peace, comfort, and support as Jim is in hospice care Mary Smith
Liz Andersen Comfort, strength, and successful treatment Susan Reiser
Jane Quigg (sister) Comfort and courage in facing mental health challenges Janet Vorvick
Ellie (aunt) Healing and recovery from a stroke Mike & Linda McDowall
Garett McDowall Healing and recovery from surgery Pastor Robyn Hartwig
Noah Oyen Healing and recovery from COVID-19 Gretchen Bancroft
Jeff George’s grandmother Healing and recovery from surgery Pastor Mark Brocker
Elaine May Successful knee replacement surgery (Oct 27) Staff
Our Nation Integrity of the election Staff
Those facing ongoing illness or distress:
Tandy Brooks,
David Bumgardner,
Vic Claar,
Marilyn Hanson,
Barry Larson,
Marvel Lund,
Ian MacDonald,
Gary Magnuson,
Hugh Mason,
Brian McKiernan,
Ed & Jean Pacey,
Corky Poppert,
Jolie Reyna,
Shane Throckmorton,
Gary Tubbs
Healing and assurance of God’s presence Staff
Bishop Elizabeth Eaton Wisdom and discernment Staff
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Blessings on our ministry Staff
Zion Lutheran Church (Redmond, OR)
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church (Sisters, OR)
Sunriver Christian Fellowship (Sunriver, OR)
Serving with us in the Oregon Synod Staff  
Muslim Educational Trust (Tigard, OR) Blessings on our interfaith partners Staff

 

 

 

Help Set the Table for Immigrant Families

Across the world, the communal bowl signifies that one does not eat alone, in isolation. For refugees and immigrants, isolation is the most threatening aspect of leaving their homeland behind and rebuilding a life in the U.S. How do families cope? They come together at mealtime and they share.

Is it possible for us to understand what our refugee families have lost? How daunting it must be to navigate a new life in America—particularly during a pandemic. The people of Lutheran Community Services NW witness the enormous challenges of rebuilding a life. They set the table for refugees to thrive by providing the emotional and practical support they need. And you can help! View the Communal Bowl video or donate now.

 

It’s Red for Reformation

Although we’ll all be worshiping at home again this weekend, remember that we are celebrating Reformation Sunday and its liturgical color is red. It’s been a tradition at St. Andrew to wear red on this anniversary of the Reformation. You can retain this tradition at home— and get away with donning red jammies if that’s your preference!

 

Thank You!

The Service Committee thanks the congregation for the generous $1,654 contributed to the Western Farm Workers Association during our September drive. These funds provide food and clothing for Washington Country’s farm workers and supports the Hillsboro offices, where legal help is offered to WFWA clients.

This organization has a record of fighting on behalf of the lowest paid workers in our area and winning improved conditions for them. WFWA has no paid staff; all office workers are volunteers.

 

Highlights for the Week

Check the church calendar for the most up-to-date information. When you go to the online church calendar, you can click “List” and “Week” to see details for the week (blue buttons in screen shot, below) rather than the whole month. Click “Next >” to see the next week.

 

Sunday, October 25: Reformation Sunday

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  Budgeting for Giving Zoom
11:00 am Online Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
1:00 pm Blessing of St. Andrew’s Reformation Earth Garden Outside – North of patio

Wednesday, October 28 – Weekly News submissions due by 4:00 pm

6:00 pm Handbell Ensemble Rehearsal Sanctuary
6:30 pm Informal Gathering Time Zoom
7:00 pm High School Youth Game Night Zoom
7:00 pm Wednesday Evening Prayer Zoom
7:30 pm Centering Prayer Zoom

Thursday, October 29

12:00 pm Team Ministry Meeting Zoom

 

Sunday, November 1:  All Saints Day

8:30 am Livestream Worship YouTube
9:30 am Virtual Coffee Time Zoom
10:00 am Sunday School (age 3 – 5th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am Confirmation (6th – 8th Grade) Zoom
10:00 am High School Youth Group Zoom
10:00 am Adult Education:  Job’s Response to Misery Zoom
11:00 am Online Worship Zoom
12:00 pm Virtual Coffee Time Zoom

 

 

 

Connecting to Worship

8:30 am: Watch worship via livestream on YouTube.

The link will be sent via email and by notification from the church app.

  • The same link will bring you to the recording of the service to watch anytime after the livestream ends.
  • An audio recording of the 8:30 am service will be available Sunday afternoon by simply dialing 503-643-9416.

11:00 am: Participate in worship via Zoom

The link will be sent via email and by notification from the church app.

  • To participate via Zoom, you can use a smart phone, computer, tablet, or a telephone.
  • To participate in “Virtual Coffee Time” simply log in early or stay logged in after the Zoom worship service ends.

Not getting church emails? Click on the green button below to contact the church office to recieve the livestream worship link and zoom invitations.

Email Church Office

Need Help? If you discover that you need help connecting to St. Andrew’s online worship services and meetings, please email Rebecca Fako Uecker. She will be available by 9:30 am on most Sunday mornings and 5:30 pm on most Wednesday evenings to provide same-day help for church-related purposes.

 

Ways to Give

As we maintain social distancing for physical health, it is important to support the fiscal health of St. Andrew. We thank you for your support of the ministries of St. Andrew. If you are able, please give now using any of the following options:

Postal Mail: Simply mail a check to the church office. Let us know if you’d like giving envelope mailed to your home each month by contacting the church office.
Text Giving: Simply text any amount to 503-386-9646 to donate to the Ministry & Mission Fund. To donate to another fund, text keyword to get a list of funds, then type the dollar amount and fund name to give. For example, to give to the local food bank, text 50 food to give $50 for food.
Give via Church App: Download “Church by MinistryOne” from the App store and watch sermons, submit prayer requests, and give a one-time or recurring gift.
Give Online: On the St. Andrew website, click on “Give” at the top of the page. Here you can view your giving, set recurring gifts, and print your Contribution Statement.
Direct Deposit / “Simply Giving:” Request a form from the church office to enable automated giving from your checking or savings account through the “Simply Giving” program.
Stock Donation: Download the form to donate stock. Please contact our Financial Secretaries in advance of processing the form or if you have questions.

Thank you for supporting the ministries of St. Andrew!