Author Archives: goodshepherdyucaipa@gmail.com

LCMS pledges $150,000 for Philippines typhoon relief

on November 10, 2013

By Megan K. Mertz

Three congregations of the Lutheran Church in the Philippines (LCP), a partner church with The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, are in the area hardest hit by Typhoon Haiyan, which tore through the country Friday, Nov. 8 and is one of the strongest storms ever recorded. At least one of those congregations is reported to have significant damage.

More than 10,000 people are feared dead and thousands more have lost their homes in the wake of the typhoon  — also known in the Philippines as Super Typhoon Yolanda.

A boy walks past the devastation from powerful Typhoon Haiyan at Tacloban city, in Leyte province in central Philippines. Rescuers in the central Philippines initially counted at least 100 people dead and many more injured a day after one of the most powerful typhoons on record hit the region Nov. 8, wiping away buildings and leveling seaside homes with massive storm surges. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

The Rev. James Cerdeñola, president of the LCP, reported, “We have three congregations in the areas worst hit by the storm. One is in Mahayag, Albuera, Leyte (a coastal town), and the pastor, the Rev. Xavier James Palattao, told me that almost all houses in his area including those of our members are either totally destroyed or significantly damaged by Yolanda’s winds. The church building and the parsonage were not spared.”

Area Lutherans also have lost crops and livestock.

“Our human-care department, the Mindanao District officers, together with our ALERT team (Active Lutherans Emergency Response Team) are working hard to bring about relief and comfort to the victims,” Cerdeñola wrote in an email.

Following reports from LCP leaders, the LCMS pledged to make available to the LCP up to $100,000 for immediate typhoon relief that will be used to provide food, water, shelter, clothing and medical care for those affected. The LCMS also is offering to match up to $50,000 for donations gathered by member churches of the International Lutheran Council, of which both the LCMS and the LCP are members.

At the request of Cerdeñola, a team of LCMS disaster-response ministry leaders tentatively plans to travel to the Philippines as early as Tuesday, Nov. 12, to help assess the situation and begin planning the long-term recovery process with members of the LCP. So far, assessments have been hampered by damage to the lines of transportation and communication.

The team from the LCMS will include the Rev. Glenn Merritt, director of LCMS Disaster Response; the Rev. Ross Johnson, co-director of LCMS Disaster Response; the Rev. Steven Schave, associate executive director of the Office of International Mission; Deaconess Pamela Nielsen, associate executive director of LCMS Communications; and Rick Steenbock, an LCMS missionary communications specialist based in Germany.

“After hearing of the ‘largest typhoon’ in recorded history and a report from the president of our partner, the Lutheran Church of the Philippines (LCP), that at least three congregations as well as the homes of pastors and church members would need to be rebuilt, the LCMS is engaging its mercy response to find the best way to assist,” said the Rev. Dr. Matthew C. Harrison, president of the LCMS.

“These funds will provide some immediate relief, and I am deeply grateful to our generous donors for making this grant possible,” Harrison continued.

After leaving the Philippines, Typhoon Haiyan traveled westward toward Vietnam.

If you would like to help LCMS Disaster Response in its ministry to support those devastated by disaster:

  • mail checks payable to “The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod” (with a memo line or note designating “LCMS Disaster Relief”) to The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, P.O. Box 66861, St. Louis, MO 63166-6861.
  • call toll-free 888-930-4438 (8:10 a.m. to 4:10 p.m. Central Time, Monday through Friday).

Because the LCMS typically receives nearly half of its annual charitable support in the months of November and December, donors are encouraged to prayerfully consider a gift to LCMS Disaster Response that is in addition to any planned year-end gift intended to help sustain the ongoing witness and mercy work of the Synod.

For more information about the Synod’s response to disasters, visit lcms.org/disaster.

Megan K. Mertz is a staff writer with LCMS Communications.

Updated Nov. 11, 2013 / Nov. 12, 2013

 

taken from:

http://blogs.lcms.org/2013/lcms-pledges-150000-for-philippines-typhoon-relief

What’s In A Name?

What’s in a name?  Well, the second commandment thinks there’s something important in a name.  Don’t take the name of the Lord your God in vain.  God’s name is not a curse word.  It is not intended to be used to damn this or that.  I’m also pretty sure Jesus’ middle name did not start with H.  This commandment goes a bit deeper, too.  We don’t make a thoughtless oath in God’s name.  We don’t lie and use God’s name to back it up.  These are all ways we can break this second commandment.

Let’s get back to the name thing really quick.  Why is God’s name such a big deal?  It was how God blessed His people. (Number 6:22-27)  It is how God answers prayer. (John 16:23)  Where God’s name is, there God is also. (Matthew 18:20)  God’s name is a big deal.  We should treat is with the honor it is due.

We should not only refrain from misusing God’s name.  We should use it the right way.  How shall we do that?  We call upon God in trouble.  (Psalm 50:15) We pray in His name.  (John 16:23) We praise Him.  (Psalm 103:1) We give thanks to Him.  (Ephesians 5:20)  There is a wrong way and a right way to use the Lord’s name.  If we neglect either way we break this commandment.

We misuse God’s name all the time.  God knows our failures and inability to keep His commandments.  Jesus Christ (which means anointed one) kept this commandment perfectly.  He kept it so well that He even kept it for you.  He took your penalty for breaking this commandment on Himself.  He also rose on the third day to reveal that His Word is true.  As the bible says, “there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12) This salvation is God’s free gift to you.  Recognize that you do not use God’s name in the correct way.  Even so, there is forgiveness in the name that is above every name (Philippians 2:9-11).  What’s in the name of Jesus?  Forgiveness.

Rev. Jaime Nava

Fear, Love, & Trust

You shall have no other gods.  Sounds easy, right?  Worship the one true God and you’ve got all the other commandments in the bag.  Who is God?  We teach that God is three in one; three persons who are all coequally eternal, uncreated, omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent.  At the same time God is not a three headed monster or a weird thing with three rotating faces.  God is three separate persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (or Ghost for you old timers).  So we teach that if we fear, love, and trust in God above all things, we’ve got it nailed.

Do we fear, love, and trust in God above all things?  I can’t count how many people I know or who I have heard with cancer.  I’ve ministered to people with Alzheimer’s or diabetes.  What happens when your youth, your energy, yoru ability to walk or drive, what happens when that is gone?  Is it easy to love God then?  I know people who have lost their homes around here.  They’ve sold their old ‘cuda that was in the garage for years.  Money is tight.  They wonder how they’re going to make the next payment or get groceries.  Do you trust God then?

What do you trust for peace?  Does it come in a bottle?  What do you fear the most in this world?  Does it involve a graveyard?  What gives you a sense of relief at the end of the day?  Is it in your bedroom?  In this world it is easy to fear, love, and trust the wrong stuff but those things are not God.  They all crumble and shift with time.

Christ entered into this changing world.  Miraculously born as fully human while fully God.  His life was pointed in one direction, the cross.  There God died for our lack of fear in God.  He died for our lack of trust in God.  He died for our lack of love for God.  God knew that we are fallen humans and so He literally took matters into His own hands, for you.

That eating disorder, that struggle with gambling, that messy divorce, all those things that drive us to fear, love, and trust in the wrong stuff, give them to Jesus.  Fear, love, trust in Him alone because He is God and you are not.  In Christ you are forgiven.

Rev. Jaime Nava

The Constant

I put up a new calendar the other day.  As one month ticked on towards the next, I got to thinking.  This year has really flown by!  What do you remember from this year?  Was there something that was really worrying you?  Have you found some closure?  Have things gone downhill since then?   Some problems have decreased in size like watching the mountain range in your rearview mirror.  Some problems have grown larger and you may not be sure how you will weather the storm ahead.  They say the only constant is change.

There is in fact a constant that does not change.  He is the same yesterday, today, and forever (Hebrews 13:8).  He makes the path straight through the valleys and mountains (Isaiah 40:4-5).  He is the solid ground when everything else is like quicksand (Psalm 19:14).  Jesus Christ was sent by the Father to enter our hectic sin-filled world.  He knows what it is to be human even to the point of death.  He shed His blood to be your constant, to declare to the world that even a sinner like you is forgiven.  His love for you will never change.  He rose from the dead.  He spearheads the way into the New Creation where pain and mourning and change will no longer be constants but rather ancient history.

Months will fold into the next.  What is a big deal today will be a memory tomorrow.  Through it all we can stand firm on Jesus Christ whose forgiveness and mercy never change.  For it stands in Scripture: “Behold, I am laying in Zion a stone, a cornerstone chosen and precious, and whoever believes in him will not be put to shame.”  1 Peter 2:6 (ESV)

Pastor Jaime Nava

Cwirla reminds convention delegates we are ‘Baptized for This Moment’

on July 21, 2013
By Gretchen Roberts

 

ST. LOUIS (July 21, 2013) — In the first of four essays delivered to the delegates and participants at the 65th Regular Convention of the LCMS, the Rev. William Cwirla, pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Hacienda Heights, Calif., described baptism as a “moment of salvation” in which “the infinite holy touches the finite unholy,” and “eternity breaks into the confines of time.”

The Rev. William Cwirla delivers the first of four convention essays, “Baptized for this Moment,” Sunday at the 65th Regular Convention.

The Rev. William Cwirla delivers the first of four convention essays, “Baptized for this Moment,” Sunday at the 65th Regular Convention. (LCMS Communications)

Recounting the story of a strong-willed 3-year-old brought reluctantly to the baptismal font one Easter Vigil service, Cwirla reminded his shocked and silent congregation after the child screamed, “No!” through the baptismal questions that “the old Adam always goes out kicking and screaming.”

Baptism, Cwirla said, is a “forensic act of the Word. God speaks, and so it is. The Divine Coroner has signed your death certificate. Your birth certificate has already been registered in the heavenly city.”

But baptism is not a one-and-done event in the timeline of life. Lutherans say “I am baptized” rather than “I was baptized.” In baptism, we are called to repentance, a life of learning continually to see things God’s way through contrition and faith. In baptism, we are called to be priests, as Peter writes to the newly baptized in 1 Peter 2:9-10. As priests, we offer ourselves as “living sacrifices” (Rom. 12:1) through martyria (witness), diakonia (service), and koinonia (life together). And that living sacrifice won’t be easy, Cwirla said. “”As soon as the world catches wind of the Christ in your martyria, it will want to crucify you, too. ‘The world will hate you because of me,’ Jesus warned his disciples.”

Baptism, Cwirla concluded, is a paradoxical moment — and we Lutherans love our paradoxes. A sinner is declared dead to sin, and a saint is declared alive to Christ. We are simul justus et peccator — simultaneously sinful and righteous. “Of the sinner, we can have no doubt — we can see it with our own eyes. Of the saint? We’ll have to take God at His Word on that, which is precisely the point,” Cwirla said.

Our Old Adam may be declared legally dead in the baptismal moment, but he’s a remarkably good swimmer who must be drowned daily, which is why we have constitutions and bylaws and Robert’s Rules of Order. “Nothing brings out the old recalcitrant ass quite like a live microphone on the convention floor,” Cwirla said to a chorus of laughter, referring to the Solid Declaration Article VI in the Formula of Concord, which states, “For the old Adam, like an unmanageable and recalcitrant ass, is still a part of baptized believers and must be coerced into the obedience of Christ…until the flesh of sin is put off entirely and man is completely renewed in the resurrection.”

During this convention and any time your convictions are challenged and your righteous indignation flares, Cwirla said, “That’s when you need to trace the sign of the holy cross and say to yourself, ‘I am baptized into Christ.’ ”

The 65th Regular Convention of the LCMS is meeting July 20-25 at the America’s Center Convention Complex under the theme “Baptized for This Moment.” Among convention participants are 1,175 clergy and lay voting delegates and 393 advisory delegates.

 

taken from:

http://blogs.lcms.org/2013/cwirla-reminds-delegates-we-are-baptized-for-this-moment

Pastor Shares About Arizona Fires

Below is a letter from Pastor Tim Blau in the Prescott, AZ area concerning the recent tragedies in Yarnell.

July 11, 2013

Greeting brothers and sisters of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod,

Thank you for the overall support that has been showered on us this past week here in the Prescott Arizona area. It has been a week filled with tragedy, sorrow and broken hearts. As most of you know, half the town of Yarnell, Arizona was destroyed and the whole town was evacuated due to the Yarnell Hill fire. Tragically, 19 Granite Mountain Hot Shots perished while fighting the fire on June 30, 2013. They were our local crew; many grew up in the area.

This tragedy has hit our church, Trinity Lutheran Church in Prescott Valley Arizona, home of God’s World Pre-School and Childcare, and our entire quad-city community very hard. Hot Shot Joe Thurston, father of one of our Pre-School families died, leaving behind a loving wife and two sons, ages 3 and 6. Hot Shot Wade Parker, one of our members’ nieces’ fiancé died also.

Trinity and I, their pastor Tim Blau, have been overwhelmed by the calls and emails from the Pacific Southwest District President Larry Stoterau, Vice President Vince Harmon and our Circuit 28 churches. I would also like to thank the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod under the leadership of President Harrison and Glenn Merrit, international director of LCMS World Relief and Human Care for their quick response to our need of comfort to the Hot Shot families, their friends, the entire Fire Department and our community.

On July 1st we were in contact with Lutheran Church Charities (LCC) and asked them if they could send Comfort Dogs our way. On July 4th seven dogs and eight handlers flew in from three different states under the leadership of Tim Hetzner, President of Lutheran Church Charities. They came to our church and got to ‘work’ right away as they spread themselves through the crowd of hundreds of people from our community that were gathered to watch the fireworks.

The next 4 days were filled with tears, hugs, comradery and, most of all, comfort from 7 beautiful Golden Retrievers. We visited many fire stations and firefighters. Many of the fire fighters enjoyed seeing the dogs come into the station. At first they just patted their heads, but soon many were on their knees embracing the dog. They allowed the dog to comfort them and absorb some of the pain they were enduring. The dogs graciously and compassionately allowed it to happen. It was extremely moving to witness God’s grace and comfort.

We visited the Memorial Fence around Station 7 where our Granite Mountain Hot Shots were based. The setting was somber, many tears were flowing and many memorials tugged at hearts. As the dogs walked the fence line many people stooped to hug them. For some it allowed a smile to come to their hearts, for some it allowed the tears to begin to flow.

Comfort Dogs were invited to a private gathering of the families who had lost loved ones. They visited the Pre-School family (mom and two boys age 3 & 6) who lost their Hot Shot dad in the fire and were invited back the next day for more hugs, love and comfort from these beautiful dogs. They visited nursing homes and our homebound members. They attended the parade at the Courthouse Square where thousands of people gathered for Prescott’s Annual 4th of July Parade and they spread comfort throughout the crowd.

In addition to comfort, they pass out Bible Verses as well. Each dog has their own Facebook Page where you can track their journey. Each dog has their own business card with a Bible verse on it to spread the love and compassion of Christ. If we were to hand a Bible Verse to a stranger, most would drop it into the nearest trash receptacle, but the dogs are handing out the Bible Verse so people are more receptive to receiving the card! Many look up the dog on Facebook, where they again see the verse. The Comfort Dogs enable us to touch people that wouldn’t normally approach us. They also are allowed into places that the community wouldn’t normally be able to go.

 

This week’s events will affect our community for a very long time. Our entire community will need long term after care, especially those directly affected.

What does Trinity Lutheran Church need to continue to reach out to these families long term?

  • Funds for long term counseling, therapy and child care for Joe Thurston’s family
  • Funds to quickly bring in two comfort dogs to Trinity. They will be used daily from year to year to reach out to the Thurston family, other Hot Shot families, and the entire Fire Department Community.
  • Funds to reach out to the residents of Yarnell whose homes were destroyed. Many residents lost absolutely everything in the fire.

Trinity Lutheran has set up three separate accounts for these needs.

Thank you for your prayers and your overwhelming support this past week. We continue to reach out to our entire community, congregation and Pre-School as we comfort them with the love and mercy of Jesus Christ.

Caring through Christ,

Pastor Tim Blau

June 25 – The Presentation of the Augsburg Confession

October 31 is rightly celebrated as Reformation Day, the day in 1517 Martin Luther published 95 Theses for debate, an action considered to be one of the sparks of the Reformation. June 25, however, is at least as important. On this date in 1530, Chancellor Christian Beyer, a member of the government of Duke John, elector of Saxony, read before Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and a gathering of princes (a “Diet”) in the city of Augsburg, Germany, a confession of faith signed by seven princes and two city councils in whose lands the teachings of Luther and the Wittenberg reformers had taken root in the previous decade. Luther’s colleague, Philip Melanchthon, is the principal author, though he used several previous documents in the preparation.

As he was still under the imperial ban, Luther himself was unable to attend the meeting in Augsburg. When Melanchthon and other Lutheran theologians and princes arrived at Augsburg, they found that they were being accused of just about every heresy known to the church. So they decided to make a united Lutheran defense of their teaching, both confessing the Gospel teaching of the reformation, and also showing that it was nothing new. Not only is Lutheran teaching based solely on Scripture, it is essentially the doctrine of the church universal from the beginning. The purpose of the confession was also to explain why and how the churches of the Lutheran reformation had corrected certain abuses that had sprung up in the church.

The genius of the resulting Augsburg Confession is that, in clear and unambiguous terms, it shows how the Gospel, the good news of justification by grace for Christ’s sake received through faith alone, is the heart of every major teaching of the church. Drawn from Scripture, Lutheran theology seeks to bring the greatest comfort to hurting and broken people, to penitent sinners.

As Lutherans, we subscribe other confessional statements in the Book of Concord – Luther’s catechisms, the Formula of Concord, etc. – but none are more important than the Augsburg Confession. Here we insist that “we cannot obtain forgiveness of sin and righteousness before God by our own merits, works, or satisfactions, but that we receive forgiveness of sin and become righteous before God by grace, for Christ’s sake, through faith, when we believe that Christ suffered for us and that for his sake our sin is forgiven and righteousness and eternal life are given to us.  For God will regard and reckon this faith as righteousness, as Paul says in Romans 3:21-26 and 4:5.” (Augsburg Confession, Article IV, Tappert edition, p. 30).

This teaching is not only meant to comfort, but it begs to be confessed and proclaimed in the world. It is the beating Gospel heart of Christ’s mission through His church. Christian Beyer, it is said, proclaimed the text of this confession in a loud voice for all to hear. We also cannot keep it to ourselves, but must bring it to many more that they too might hear and believe. May we in our day faithfully confess this Bible teaching, centered in Christ. More tomorrow.

+ Herbert Mueller
First Vice-President, LCMS

from: http://wmltblog.org/2013/06/june-25-the-presentation-of-the-augsburg-confession/

Disaster Relief

From lcms.org: http://blogs.lcms.org/2013/moore-pastor-relates-tornado-nightmare

Moore, Okla., pastor relates tornado nightmare

on May 24, 2013

By Melanie Ave

On Monday afternoon, May 20, Pastor Mark Bersche of St. John’s Lutheran Church in Moore, Okla., was working in his church office.

“It was kind of a light day,” he recalled.

He looked outside and noticed the sky growing dark. “When you live in Oklahoma, you know to keep an eye on the weather,” Bersche said.

He heard a weather radio alert. A tornado warning had been issued for the south Oklahoma City suburb where he has cared for the 400-member congregation for the past two years. A twister had been spotted north of Newcastle, about 12 miles away. Packing 200 mph winds, the tornado was ripping a mile-wide path of destruction on its way to Moore.

“I’m thinking, that’s exactly where I live,” Bersche said.

He texted a weather update to his wife, Wendy, a hospice nurse who was visiting one last patient in Oklahoma City before she headed home.The Rev. Mark Bersche, pastor of St. John's Lutheran Church, Moore, Okla., holds his phone, showing an image he took of the approaching tornado. (Dan Gill)

The Rev. Mark Bersche, pastor of St. John’s Lutheran Church, Moore, Okla., holds his phone, showing an image he took of the approaching tornado. (Dan Gill)

One of their three children, Ashleigh, 11, was at Briarwood Elementary School a few blocks away. There was less than an hour left in the school day when the principal came over the intercom and told the teachers to seek shelter. They led the children into bathrooms and hallways and told them to keep their heads down in their practiced tornado positions.

“I was afraid,” Ashleigh said.

Bersche drove to his home in Oklahoma City, gathered his dogs and opened the storm shelter in the garage. Outside, in the distance, he saw a gray cone in the sky moving toward his house. He snapped a picture with his phone.

“I’ve seen tornado funnel clouds for years and years,” the native Oklahoman said. “I’ve never seen anything of this size.”

Before long, there were eight neighbors, or maybe nine, and three dogs in his underground shelter. They peeked out and saw tin, limbs, wood and other debris — the remains of homes and buildings and livelihoods — falling from the sky like rain and littering the yard.

The ground shook.

Bersche texted his wife: “Do not come home.” He sent her another text: “Things are not good here. We may not have a home tomorrow.” She would not get the text for 15 minutes. It would take her four frantic hours to get home because of the debris and chaos in the aftermath of the monstrous tornado.

At Briarwood Elementary, the school was in full tornado mode. Ashleigh said her teacher was on the verge of tears as she kept telling the children, “It’s OK. It’s OK. It’s OK.” Many of the children screamed and cried as the tornado towered over the school, darkening the hallway, ripping off the roof and doorways, and pelting the school with wood and metal. A wall fell on top of them.

“We had little kids with us,” she said. “They were screaming. They wanted their moms and dads.”

Pastor Mark Bersche leads a meeting at St. John's Lutheran Church in Moore, Okla., to discuss how to help tornado victims. (Dan Gill)

At Bersche’s home, after the debris stopped falling, a neighbor told him and the others how the Orr Family Farm, a local tourist attraction, had been destroyed.

And, the neighbor said, the schools were leveled.

Briarwood Elementary was directly west of the destroyed farm, where dozens of animals were killed by the storm. Ashleigh was finishing her sixth-grade year.

Bersche and another family jumped in the car and drove as far as they could through the storm-strewn streets of Moore to get to his daughter.

“I got out and we ran” toward the school, Bersche said. “It’s one of those scenes I’ll never forget. Everything was twisted and demolished. I know everyone says it, but it’s true. It looked like a war zone.”

Some people were limping; others bleeding. Ashleigh’s teacher had a broken ankle.

“If you looked at the school, you would think there is no way anybody could have walked out of it alive,” Bersche said. “It was nothing but rubble.”

He could not get through the sidewalk on the school’s playground — where his daughter walked to school every day — because of fallen power lines. Word began circulating among the parents and others who rushed to the school and crowded the damaged landscape: All the children at Briarwood were safe.

Sadly, that was not the case at Plaza Towers Elementary, about two miles away. Of the 24 people who died in the tornado, seven were children from that school.

Bersche found his daughter in the parking lot and wrapped his arms around her. She had been crying. She was wearing one shoe. Her glasses, backpack and bicycle were missing. He scooped her up and carried her from the scene, past flattened homes, shredded metal and spewing gas lines. A stranger whose home was severely damaged loaned Ashleigh a pair of shoes.

Bersche’s daughter was not injured. His home and church suffered no damage. But the homes of five members of St. John’s were damaged, as were the homes of four members from Trinity Lutheran Church in Norman, Okla. (Click here to read a related story, “Synod approves $100,000 grant for tornado needs.”)

Linda Shoemake of Oklahoma City, Okla., looks through the living room of her home after the May 20 tornado took off the roof. Shoemake, a member of Trinity Lutheran Church in Norman, Okla., was not at home during the storm. (Dan Gill)

Linda Shoemake of Oklahoma City, Okla., looks through the living room of her home after the May 20 tornado took off the roof. Shoemake, a member of Trinity Lutheran Church in Norman, Okla., was not at home during the storm. (Dan Gill)

A block to the west of Briarwood Elementary, on the Moore-Oklahoma City border, all that’s left standing of the three-bedroom home of Trinity member Linda Shoemake is four walls. She’s lived there for 14 years and was not at home when the tornado came through.

“Your heart just falls out when you see it,” she said, fighting tears.

Trinity and St. John’s held prayer services on Wednesday, May 22. They began planning how they were going to reach out with the love and mercy of Christ to the community with the help of LCMS Disaster Response and the LCMS Oklahoma District office.

The congregation is gathering a list of volunteers and plans to become a distribution site for aid efforts. Already shipments of food and water are arriving.

At Wednesday’s prayer service, Bersche said he focused on Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 12:10, “For when I am weak, then I am strong.”

“Right now, we’re just trying to shuffle through,” he said. “Just pray for us. I’ve had so many phone calls from churches all around the nation. We really appreciate the heartfelt concern. We are so thankful people are praying.”

To see a photo album of the LCMS response to the tornado, click here.

To support those in need through LCMS Disaster Response:

  • Mail checks payable to “The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod” (with a memo line or note designating “LCMS Disaster Relief”) to The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, P.O. Box 66861, St. Louis, MO 63166-6861.
  • Call toll-free 888-930-4438 (8:10 a.m. to 4:10 p.m. CST, Monday through Friday).

Melanie Ave is a senior writer and social media coordinator for LCMS Communications.

Updated May 25, 2013

Reporter Online is the Web version of Reporter, the official newspaper of
The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod. Content is prepared by LCMS Communications.